They battling each other. You got to look back at it when time passes and you look and you say you’ve said things that agitated each other to the point that you might have [music] wanted to run into each other.
I got the Life After Death double CD dropping March 25th.

50 Cent just dropped explosive new evidence about the murders of Tupac and Biggie, and it completely shatters everything we thought we knew. His brand new Netflix series digs deep into the dark web of gang ties, industry power plays, and buried police files that were never meant to see the light of day.
Hidden audio from Kef D’s own mouth and insider confessions are exposing something bigger. Whispers that the so-called East versus West beef wasn’t just about rap, but a high-stakes game involving real money and real power.
Once those lost recordings came out, the murders stopped looking like random street hits and started to look masterminded. Now, imagine this. After almost 30 years of silence, mystery, and endless debate, one of hip hop’s most fearless voices decides it’s time to lift the curtain on the two most infamous unsolved crimes in music history.
Yes, Curtis 50 Cent Jackson is stepping straight into the fire. And this time, he’s not holding anything back. On December 2nd, 2025, 50 Cent unleashed a bombshell Netflix docu series that’s sending tremors through the hip hop world and beyond.
This series dives head first into the shocking details behind the murders of Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G., two kings of rap whose lives were brutally cut short in their prime.
It’s been 28 long years since Christopher Wallace, known to fans as Biggie Smalls or the Notorious B.I.G., was gunned down in Los Angeles on March 9th, 1997. And just 6 months before that, on September 13th, 1996, Tupac Shakur, the poetic revolutionary, the voice that spoke truth to power, lost his life in a violent Las Vegas drive-by.
These weren’t just rappers. They were cultural giants, voices that shaped generations. Their influence went way beyond music. It changed fashion, politics, and the entire identity of hip hop.
For decades, fans have been stuck in online rabbit holes, Reddit threads, Discord chats, YouTube breakdowns, and every comment section imaginable, asking the same burning questions. Who really pulled the trigger? Was it a gang feud, or was there an industry puppet master running the show from the shadows?
Theories have gone completely wild. But now, 50 Cent’s bringing receipts. The rumors have been non-stop, and the truth harder to catch than getting verified on Twitter—until now.
Enter 50 Cent, the executive producer with zero fear of controversy. He’s never been one to bite his tongue, and this time he’s taking it all the way.
Through his multi-art Netflix expose, he’s pieced together testimonies from industry insiders, never-before-seen archives, and chilling audio that reveal just how dark and dangerous that era of hip-hop really was.
But make no mistake, this ain’t some lazy rehash of old headlines. This is a raw, fearless, deep dive featuring people who were actually in the room. People who lived the chaos and are finally ready to spill what really went down.
The docu series wastes zero time jumping into the heavy stuff. By episode two, it’s full throttle.
That’s when things get truly wild, uncovering a narrative that’s been whispered in studio back rooms and speculated about in countless articles, but never exposed this boldly or this clearly.
50’s team brings forward voices we’ve barely heard before. Kirk Burroughs, a label co-founder. Mark Curry, a rapper once signed to Bad Boy Records, and Roxanne Johnson, the ex-wife of Craig Mack.
These aren’t outsiders or bloggers talking rumors. These are people who are deep inside the machine, watching the power moves, the rivalries, and the dangerous street politics unfold right in front of their eyes.
And that’s where things take a darker turn.
One of the most jaw-dropping revelations the documentary uncovers is how the East Coast versus West Coast label wars escalated into a street-level proxy battle, with real gangs getting pulled into industry beef.
The whispers say the Crips allegedly linked up with East Coast backers while the Bloods sided with West Coast crews. Suddenly, this wasn’t just a war fought through diss tracks or magazine interviews. This was real violence spilling into the streets, and people were paying the ultimate price.
The documentary doesn’t just hint. It lays it out clearly and powerfully, arguing that these dangerous alliances may have been the tipping point behind both murders.
In one haunting moment, Kirk Burroughs, now older and far removed from that chaos, reflects on it all with heavy regret and says that only with time and distance does the full devastating picture finally come into focus.
There was serious orchestration behind Tupac’s death. And the way the documentary lays it out is straight up chilling.
After Tupac’s shooting in Las Vegas, the music industry machine didn’t slow down for a second. Instead of pausing to mourn or figure out what really happened, insiders say there was pressure from the top to keep pushing albums, keep doing interviews, keep the money flowing at all costs.
Business over blood. Image over life.
According to those close to the situation, Biggie was heavily pushed, some even say forced, to travel to Los Angeles to promote his upcoming album, Life After Death. Even though everyone knew the tension between coasts was at a boiling point, it was like walking into enemy territory when every warning sign said don’t go.
Biggie wasn’t reckless. He saw what was happening. He knew the energy was off and he didn’t want to make that trip.
But the label’s agenda, the management’s goals, and the never-ending promotional grind overrode basic common sense and safety.
Burroughs’ testimony hits hard. He argues that Biggie was practically led to his death. He paints a picture of an industry so blinded by profit margins and record sales that it ignored the human cost.
The obsession with staying at the top created the perfect storm, turning that tragic night in Los Angeles into something that feels less like bad luck and more like inevitable tragedy.
And just when you think the series can’t go any deeper, it drops actual evidence.
Not just rumors or speculation, but real audio recordings that flip the entire narrative on its head.
These tapes come straight from Dwayne Keef D. Davis, a known member of the Southside Crips, who was arrested in 2023 and is still awaiting trial for Tupac’s murder.
The footage reveals his 2008 proffer session with police, where suspects can speak openly in exchange for limited immunity.
What he says in that room is absolutely bone chilling.
In those recordings, Keef D gives a first-hand detailed account of what happened the night Tupac was shot, breaking it down minute by minute.
He recalls the violent clash at the MGM Grand Casino between Tupac, members of his crew, and Death Row CEO Suge Knight against Orlando Anderson—his own nephew.
That fight wasn’t random. It was a setup brewing for months.
After the altercation, Davis claims they armed themselves and went hunting for retaliation.
They waited at Club 662, then later spotted Tupac’s BMW on the Vegas strip.
A sharp U-turn. A pull-up.
And then—shots rang out.
Tupac was hit four times.
Six days later, on September 13th, 1996, he was gone.
But the story doesn’t end there.
In the audio confession, Davis claims this wasn’t just revenge—it was a paid hit. There was money on the table.
And that revelation opens a Pandora’s box of questions.
Who would bankroll a hit like that? Who had the motive and the means?
The documentary makes one thing clear.
This wasn’t random.
It was calculated. Planned. Connected to power, money, and control.
And six months later—Biggie was dead too.
Another night. Another car. Another shooter.
Another legend gone.
The series lays it out heavy. What began as artistic competition spiraled into an all-out war where words turned into bullets.
Lives were lost.
Legacies were cut short.
And even now, decades later, the truth remains buried in shadows.
Justice still hasn’t been fully served.
The deeper you look, the murkier it gets.
And that’s why this story still hits so hard.
Because at its core, it leaves us with one haunting question:
Who really pulled the strings?
Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G. are gone.
But their voices, their impact, and their legacy—
Will echo forever.
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