Eminem isn’t afraid to go after people in his rap songs, and one of those individuals is Sean “Diddy” Combs. The rapper has referenced the hip-hop mogul in his music throughout the years
Eminem has come for Sean “Diddy” Combs in his raps over the years.
The rapper, born Marshall Mathers, is no stranger to rap beefs and offensive remarks. He recently shaded Diddy on his 12th studio album, The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce), that came out this past July. The album was released in the midst of Diddy’s allegations, during the FBI raids on his Miami and Los Angeles mansion, but before his arrest and indictment. Diddy has numerous allegations of abuse and sexual abuse against him and since his arrest, he has accumulation more with over 120 lawsuits set to drop. He continues to deny the allegations.
The 54-year-old disgraced music mogul is currently awaiting trial at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center after being denied bail three times. He was arrested and indicted on September 16 on charges of sex trafficking, racketeering, transportation to engage in prostitution. Diddy had plead not guilty to the charges. Below are all the times Eminem has targeted Diddy in his raps and even mentioned his allegations.
Earlier Music Diddy References
( Image: WireImage)
The Not Afraid artist started pretty early in his beef with Diddy. He took his first shot at the rapper in his 1997 track F—ing Crazy which is supposedly the original version of his hit song Any Man from the mixtape Sound Bombing II where Emimem is credited as a writer and artist. The following lyrics go: “Original Bad Boy on the case, cover your face / Came in the place blowed, and sprayed Puffy with Mase.” He does a play on words on Diddy’s Bad Boy signature and his connection to the rapper Mase.
Then on a 2000 track, Marshalls Mathers, he referenced Diddy again: “You little groupie b—-, get off me, go f— Puffy.” In the same album that Marshall Mathers was apart of (The Marshal Mathers LP), he mentioned him again and his then-relationship with singer-actress Jennifer Lopez in I’m Back: “If I ever stuck it to any singer in showbiz / It’d be Jennifer Lopez and Puffy, you know this. I’m sorry, Puff, but I don’t give a f—.”
In 2018, Eminem had beef with musician Machine Gun Kelly and in his 2018 song Killshot, he used the song to diss MGK and the Bad Boy CEO himself: “Kells, the day you put out a hit is the day Diddy admits / That he put the hit out that got Pac killed.” Eminem went on to add after the Diddy killing Tupac claim: “I’m just playing, Diddy, you know I love you.” But that didn’t stop the old rumors and theories that Diddy was involved in Tupac’s shooting in 1996. Diddy has denied any involvement in the New York rapper’s death. Former LA gang member Duane “Keefe D” Davis on September 29, 2023 was arrested and indicted by a grand jury for the first-degree murder of Tupac.
Before the new 2024 album, his last reference was in the 2020 track Godzilla featuring late rapper Juice WRLD. In the track, he makes an allusion to Diddy’s reality performing competition series on MTV called Making The Band: “Like Kid Ink, b—-, I got them racks with so much ease that they call me Diddy/ ‘Cause I make bands and I call getting cheese a cakewalk (Cheesecake, yeah).” In one episode, the music executive made contestants on the show walk six miles to get him cheesecake.
2024 Album Diddy Call Out
In the recent album, Eminem sprinkled a few Diddy references but this time applying to his allegations and the unearthed video of him abusing Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura. The 51-year-old Detroit native’s song Fuel from the album went viral with lyrics that mention Diddy’s alleged sexual abuse and misconduct: “I’m like a R-A-P-E-R. Got so many S-As (huh) / Wait, he didn’t just spell the world ‘rapper’ and leave out a P, did he?”
The lyrics that Eminem wrote that talked about the assault was: “Next idiot ask me is gettin’ his a– beat worse than Diddy did / But on the real, though / She prolly ran out the room with his f—-in’ dildo / He tried to field goal punt her, she said to chill / Now put it back in my a– and get the steel toe.”
In the third track within the album, Bad One featuring singer White Gold, he also referenced the allegations of Diddy blowing up Kid Cudi’s car in Cassie’s Lawsuit. At the time, a spokesperson for Kid Cudi confirmed that it’s “all true” in a statement to The New York Times. The lyrics went: “The f—ing bomb with the Puffy on / I’m blowing up for Kid Cudi’s car / In front of his house where all his buddies are.”