Sean Combs' criminal trial is scheduled to start on May 5, but the media circus has already begun. Peacock documentary debuts to streaming4.
At one point, a former acquaintance tells the viewer, "Monsters get made." But, with months to go before Comb's trial, it's unclear who—apart from the filmmakers—actually cares how.
Janice Combs, the mother of Sean "Diddy" Combs, allegedly threw parties with sex and drugs during the mogul's childhood.
The documentary Making of a Bad Boy covers Sean Combs' controversial career, revealing shocking incidents from the City College stampede to Biggie's murder.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him.
The new special includes interviews with Sean Comb's former bodyguard and singer/songwriter/producer Al B. Sure.
Since his 2024 arrest, there has been a rush of "rise and fall" documentaries about Sean "Diddy" Combs. One of the first to hit Australian streamers is Diddy: The Making Of A Bad Boy.
Ari Mark promises "a raw exclusive look at Sean Combs long before he was Puff" in 'Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy,' which streams Jan. 14.
Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy,” a documentary covering the rapper’s criminal misdeeds that took him from Hollywood to prison, is available for streaming starting Tuesday, January 14.
“Puff and Heavy D decided to throw a celebrity charity basketball game," Sonny Williams, brother of a 1991 City College victim, said on Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy. “When you got Mike Tyson, LL Cool J, Heavy D himself a big celebrity — the urban community wanted to see that.”
Al B. Sure!, who shares son Quincy Brown with Kim Porter, spoke out about her 2018 death in the new documentary, Diddy: the Making of a Bad Boy, which examines Sean “Diddy” Combs’ criminal case.
Mail, TMZ, BBC Sounds, and ABC News are among the media outlets amping up coverage of the Grammy winner's legal problems.