Rick Ross thought he had the spotlight locked down when he pulled up to The Weeknd’s concert in a rare, custom Rolls-Royce, with his rumored girlfriend, singer Jasmine Kendrick, by his side. Cameras flashed, blogs went crazy, and social media couldn’t stop talking. But leave it to 50 Cent to hijack the moment with just two words: **“Stop lying.”**

 

The G-Unit mogul once again questioned whether Ross’s flashy stunt was as real as it looked—or just another performance for the cameras. This wasn’t just a one-off troll either. If you know 50, you know he’s been running this play for years. “Stop lying” has practically become his trademark catchphrase whenever he smells fakery in hip hop.

He’s used it on everyone from old rival Young Buck—whom he once labeled an “impulsive liar” on Instagram—to Diddy, amplifying allegations against him through documentaries and clowning his son King Combs’ music. For 50, no one is safe when he senses the line between reality and performance is being blurred.

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And that’s the key: 50 Cent doesn’t just see himself as a rapper or producer—he sees himself as hip hop’s **truth teller.** By publicly challenging Ross’s Rolls-Royce arrival and his “new romance,” he’s reinforcing the idea that a lot of this wealth and love flaunting is smoke and mirrors.

But of course, with 50, there’s always another layer. Is he genuinely exposing fakery, or is he just trolling for sport, knowing spectacle sells? As he once told *Vanity Fair*: *“It’s points that you say things, be creative, and create.”*

In other words—whether he’s clowning, exposing, or just stirring the pot, one thing is certain: 50 Cent knows how to turn “Stop lying” into a cultural moment, every single time.