Jamie Foxx blames Diddy for mysterious hospitalization in upcoming Netflix special
Jamie Foxx recently commented on whether Sean “Diddy” Combs was “responsible” for his strange hospitalization last year.
According to various sources, when asked about his mystery hospitalization in his forthcoming Netflix special, What Happened Was, the actor and comedian blamed Sean “Diddy” Combs.
Page Six included the slightly contradictory statements of three separate eyewitnesses. The first was Choke No Joke, a cameraman and producer who attended two of Foxx’s three tapings at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre on October 4–5, and 6. Foxx specifically implicated Combs, according to Choke No Joke in an interview with Comedy Hype that went viral on YouTube on October 7.
On October 7, Comedy Hype released a YouTube video in which Choke stated, “Jamie is preparing a Netflix special titled ‘What Had Happened Was,’ and I was responsible for the recording.” The taping lasted three days. I attended the first and last shows.
Choke claimed: During the tapings, Foxx said that “Diddy was responsible for what happened to him, and [Foxx] is the one who called the FBI on [Combs].” However, it is uncertain if the reported remarks would appear in the final edit of the show.
Meanwhile, famous security guard Big Homie. CC also went to a gig and said in an interview with Cam Capone News last week that Foxx accused Combs of poisoning him and “reported him to the FBI because of it.”
A third guest, actor Dennis L.A. White, had a different perspective. White said Foxx rejected the allegation, adding, “If [Diddy] was responsible, I’d be dead,” without mentioning police enforcement.
Despite the differing testimonies, all three eyewitnesses agreed that Foxx utilized Combs as a constant theme, interspersed with witty comments to keep audiences amused. Phones were seized during the events; hence, no film of the event exists.
It’s unclear if Foxx’s special will include these remarks.
Last month, authorities arrested Combs, 54, on charges of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty.
According to the indictment, federal authorities searched his houses in Los Angeles and Miami in March and discovered more than 1,000 bottles of lubricant, numerous drugs, and three AR-15s.
The charges allege that the Grammy winner “abused, threatened, and coerced women and others around him to fulfill his sexual desires, protect his reputation, and conceal his conduct” for a long time, “creating a criminal enterprise whose members and associates engaged in… sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice.”
The indictment claims that Combs and members of his Combs Enterprise organized several “Freak”Offs”—drug-fueled sex parties.