Piers Morgan Uncensored - Diddy's Makeup Artist Speaks Out - With DJ Vlad and Jason Lee
Episode Date: October 25, 2024More revelations, more shock, more disgust. So goes the sordid sex scandal of Diddy AKA Sean Combs. This week, new lawsuits were filed against the incarcerated music mogul, including allegations of se...xual assault on a 13-year-old girl; wherein currently unnamed celebrities looked on and apparently, did nothing. Rapper 50 Cent has spoken out against Diddy, while Diddy’s children claim their father is the victim of a vast conspiracy. In an Uncensored exclusive, Piers Morgan interviews Diddy’s former makeup artist Mylah Morales, who opens up on the hostile working environment he created, and the trauma she still carries to this day. Piers then talks to podcaster and commentator Jason Lee, Johnny Depp’s lawyer Benjamin Chew, Diddy’s former publicist Rob Shuter and host of 'VladTV' DJ Vlad to analyse what we already know, and predict just how bad this is going to get. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You know, I owe a lot to puff with my career because he taught me really everything I know about the industry.
You say you're very surprised and shocked by what's now come out.
I wouldn't be shocked if I'd seen what happened to Cassie.
I think this guy's a monster.
Do you feel any sense of guilt that you didn't report it?
We were terrified of Sean.
I wish that I could have done something more.
If you were called to testify against him, would you do that?
There are a lot of people who were checking their role in Texas.
in making sure they weren't at particular parties
because I think it can ruin careers.
I thought Puffy was a phony.
I thought he pretended to be like a gangster,
pretended to be tough,
where in reality, he was the first to go to bed.
I mean, there's the music,
and then there is the person making the music.
Peers, there are three deadly people on this panel,
me and you and DJ Vlad.
They do not like the fact that the three of us
are here talking right now.
The P.D.D.D.E.S.
scandal has rocked the music industry,
to its core and new tremors are reverberating daily.
A slew of new lawsuits makes damning claims
about more sexual abuse,
including with a 13-year-old girl.
50 cents says he's been raising the alarm
for more than a decade.
But six of Diddy's children
say their father was a victim of a grand conspiracy theory.
Every day, there are new and damning allegations
from the people are new and best,
and over the next hour or so,
we're going to hear even more of them.
Well, joining me now is the podcast
and commentator Jason Lee,
attorney Benjamin Chu, who represented Johnny Depp
in his defamation case
against Amber Heard, the former Diddy publicist and host of the naughty but nice podcast, Rob Schueter,
and from Vlad TV, DJ Vlad. Welcome to all of you. I'm going to start first by talking to Myla Morales,
who worked as Sean Combs' makeup artists for many years, and was also friends with Cassandra Cassie Ventura,
as well as Diddy's deceased partner, Kim Porter. Well, welcome to Unsensored, Mila.
Just to paint a picture of how well you know P. Diddy. How long did you work for him?
I work with Sean Combs in 2000, early 2000, until 2005.
So around five years or so?
I was five years or so, yes.
And how much time did you spend with him?
I spent a lot of, like, you know, obviously I did his male grooming,
so we did a lot of, you know, it was strictly professional,
and we spent video shoots, photo shoots.
I traveled the world with Kim and Sean
because, you know, he invented the glam school.
I mean, he invented the entourage.
So I would travel with Kim and Puff to Santropay
to make sure that Kim was ready for the paparazzi.
And what was he like?
I mean, when you were around him then,
albeit this is quite a long time ago, 20 years ago,
but what was your assessment being that close to him
for that length of time?
What was your assessment of his character?
Well, Puff was a perfectionist, and he was just a completely hard worker.
He wanted everything to look grandioso.
And, you know, he taught me really everything I know about the industry,
like as far as, like, you know, being super professional, super just...
Everything was so just grandioso.
But has your view now changed?
I mean, absolutely. I mean, this is 24 years later, and it's shocking to hear all these allegations. It's completely shocking.
Shocking to hear them? Is it surprising, given everything that you may have gleaned about him in that period?
It is surprising. Yes, it is. I mean, it's been, you know, hearing all of this. I mean, you know, I owe a lot to to puff with my career because, you know, I've worked with the biggest photographers in the
the world, the biggest directors in the world. And, you know, we've met, we would go to Paris
Fashion Weeks. I mean, we were running around with like the biggest names in the business.
So, you know, to hear all of this happening right now is just, it's shocking.
You see, the reason I'm curious why you find it that shocking is that in 2010 you were very
close to Cassie as well. And we've seen this horrific video, which emerged last year at CNN,
from several years prior where he literally... Well, I'm just going to ask you, I'm going to just let
the viewers know where I'm going here. You know, there was this appalling video that we're now seeing
where he literally beats her up in public, in a hotel, you know, on a floor of a hotel,
but in a public area. And it was absolutely despicable. Now, you said about that, that it wasn't
a one-off that when Cassie was beaten up on a separate occasion in 2010, you took her in,
you said. We didn't even want to go to hospitals. So I had a doctor, friend of mine come and
take a look at her. She was badly bruised, had knots on her head and a black eye. We were scared.
I still have PTSD talking about it. That's nearly 15 years ago. So my only question to you is,
given that, given what you witnessed then, given what you knew had happened, and given what we all
then saw with the second incident on that horrific video. Actually, why are you that surprised about
these allegations that have come to light? I mean, for me, it's like it's just reliving the whole
situation over again. And that's, that to me is the shocking part of it. You know, I block that.
That's PTSD. That's trauma that I experienced from back then. And reliving it is just is really, you know,
difficult for me to experience because I've known Cassie since she was 17 years old and I was like
her big sister as well as her makeup artist and just watching all of this is it's absolutely shocking
right but I mean the reality is it's disgusting but just based on what you witnessed that day in
2010 and based on what we've all seen in the other video the guy at the very least was a person who
beat up women and yet the picture
you painted of him of your time with him, you know, in the early 2000s, was actually very positive.
And I'm, and you say you're very surprised and shocked by what's now come out. I wouldn't be
shocked if I'd seen what happened to Cassie at first hand and the way you did. I think this guy's a
monster. And I'm curious why that isn't what you're thinking or have you blanked that out.
Oh, I've absolutely blinked it out all these years because it's something that I, I was very focused
on my career. And so what happened then, you know, obviously we couldn't discuss with anyone.
So I had to like blank it out of my brain.
Do you wish with hindsight?
I'd continue on and...
Right, but do you wish with hindsight, and I'm not, listen, I'm not accusing you of doing
anything wrong. I'm just saying, do you wish with hindsight to prevent him treating other people
in such a horrendous manner? Do you wish you'd taken it to the police, to authorities?
Of course. I mean...
Absolutely.
But, you know, these are things that we couldn't do because we were terrified of Sean.
Right.
See, that's really interesting because that wasn't how you described him at the start of this.
So tell me about that.
Clearly there's another side to this guy to the one that you painted when we first started talking.
And the other side to him is appalling, isn't it?
I mean, he wielded this power, this influence, this terror.
There's terror over you. Tell me about that.
I mean, like I said, like at the beginning of, you know, my career with Puff, you know, it was just like, you know, we were rising to the top.
And, like, when it got to the point with Cassie, it was, like, very difficult for me to, like, just, I mean, deal with that.
Like, I, like, even right now, it's just, it gives me, like, it gives me, like, it.
like trauma. And so watching all this, all these allegations unfold, it's, it's, I mean,
being an industry professional, that's all I cared about. And like, I don't know what goes on like
behind closed doors. So that's not, you know, somewhere, that's not something for me to like even
think about. And so when, you know, watching this unfold has been really difficult for me to like,
you know, like stomach.
Right, but it wasn't, I mean,
just respectfully, it wasn't behind
closed doors because in 2010
Cassie came to you after he beat her up.
Well,
no, but I was there. I was actually
with her
that night. Right.
But that's what I mean, is that you knew it was happening
because you were there.
Mm-hmm.
Do you feel any sense of guilt
that you didn't report it?
Of course, absolutely.
I feel a lot of guilt.
I mean, I've been feeling that this whole entire year, you know,
because I wish that I could have done something more.
But at the time, we were both very terrified.
So it's like, what were we supposed to do?
You said, this is a quote from you,
we were always scared of Puff.
He's a powerful person.
We don't know what would have happened to us if we've spoken out.
He could make you disappear.
I mean, that sounds like you're saying he would basically have you killed.
I mean, who knows?
Who knows? We were just scared.
Did you genuinely think you might have you killed?
No, I don't, I don't, I was just saying that because that's something that, you know, it's a thought.
It's just not, I don't know if it would happen. It was a thought.
That's a pretty extraordinary thought to have, Myler, about someone, isn't it?
They have the potential capability to do that.
Well, it was a thought.
Did you fear he might kill Cassie?
I don't know.
I mean, like I said, I don't know.
That's not something that, you know, like I have no idea.
It's just, you know, to fear that, yes, but, you know, to actually, like, I can't answer that question.
I really can't.
He came out, Diddy, after the second attack that we knew about, there have been reports of
multiple others. He put a video apology out. Let's take a look at this.
My behavior on that video is inexcusable.
I take full responsibility for my actions in that video.
I was disgusted then when I did it. I'm disgusted now.
I went and I sought out professional help. I'm so sorry.
But I'm committed to be a better man each and every day.
What do you make of that video?
I mean, I just, it was
I didn't believe it.
Right.
Because you knew he'd done it before.
Exactly.
I mean, if he's done it before, then, you know, making an apology letter or apology video, that just holds no value for me.
There are a lot of rumors that he may have had some involvement in Kim's death.
What do you feel about those rumors?
I mean, I don't know.
I can't answer that question.
I mean, those are rumors, and that's not something that I can.
can answer. Given everything that you've now read and heard about him, do you think it's possible?
Possibly. I don't know. Like I said, I can't answer that question.
The indictments against him center around these freak-off parties where it's alleged a lot of coercion,
assault, abuse, drugs, and so on took place. Did you know about these parties? Did you ever
attend them? Absolutely not. I mean, I was there just to do my job.
and I don't know anything about those parties.
Like, I, I'm actually in shock to hear about them at this point.
Like, I was there to do my job during the working hours,
and then I would go home and work the next day.
I mean, I had nothing to do with that.
Absolutely not.
Was it not common knowledge that he had these late after parties, these freak-offs?
Not for me.
I had no idea.
What do you think is going to happen to, Mila?
I mean, I'm not really sure.
I mean, he, I'm not sure.
It's just, it makes me very sad to see, you know, the outcome of all of this.
Like, just to see his legacy, like, where it is now and how we started.
So it's, it's, it makes me very sad.
Do you, I mean, his children have come out with a powerful statement saying the past month has devastated our family.
Many have judged both him and us based on accusations, conspiracy theories and false narratives that have spiraled into absurdity on social media.
We stand united supporting you, Puffy, every step of the way.
We hold onto the truth knowing it will prevail and nothing will break the strength of our family.
We miss you and love you, dad.
Now, you would expect kids to support their father.
but the sheer welter of allegations,
the horrific detail that contained in them,
the fact that this has all been run by the FBI,
he obviously have pretty much an impeccable record of conviction
with these kind of cases.
It is more likely than not now that he's never coming out of prison.
What do I think about it?
Yeah.
I feel very sad for his children, especially his children,
because, I mean, they didn't ask for this.
and now they have no mother and they're not going to have a father
and that really is, that's devastating for me.
Like the children are, I don't know what to, I don't know how to look at this.
Mara, just for me, what's your biggest regret with all this,
given what's now been coming out?
My biggest regret is not coming forward to the police about what happened in 2010.
Have you now been approached to talk?
Have they asked you about that now to do a formal interview?
No.
Are you expecting them to?
I hope not.
I mean, I just, this has all been very traumatic for me, like all of this.
But if you were called to testify against him, would you do that?
I don't know.
You wouldn't?
No, I don't think so.
My, listen, I know it's very difficult for you.
And like I said, I'm not making any...
suggesting that you knew about any of this other than obviously what you witnessed with Paul Cassie.
And I appreciate you joining me. Thank you very much.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. Well, let me turn to the panel now to talk about all this. Jason, you know,
I think there's probably a lot of people who were around Diddy during the last 25 years or so
who might well share Myler's horror and shock about what's happened. What did you make of what she said?
One of the conversations that people are having is how many people were around and knew about the Diddy
after dark parties. There's some of us that went to the ditty parties. Everybody in the culture,
everybody that is a celebrity is wanted to go to these parties because they were the party
that you had to go to. But this diddy after dark situation that none of us were privileged to go to,
thank God. You know, I want to know who are all the people that were there and why are they not
being indicted? Why is everything being kept so confidential? Why can't we see more information so we can
have a bigger picture? You know, that is the frustrating part because a lot of us that know these
people are still among them. And we would like them to be held accountable as well. I feel for
his children, like she said, you know, the kids that I do know I've said many times are good kids
and reading some of their statements about, you know, their books being pulled, you know, their
mother's legacy now being caught up in this world when created by their father and all these
allegations has been disappointing to see. But I guess it's just part for the course in today's times.
Ben Chu, you represented Johnny Depp.
He obviously went through a whole very highly publicized court case
and ended up being acquitted with Amber Heard.
There weren't a serious allegations,
but they were certainly quite serious in their own right.
When you look at the case against Dedy,
it's obviously on a massively bigger scale,
but do you think that the FBI basically have their man?
Is there enough there?
do you think to get a lengthy conviction?
Here's very good to be with you.
Just to clarify, the Defe-Heard face, we were,
Johnny was the plaintiff in that civil action for defamation.
He had the burden of proof to show that Ms. Hurd had lied about the allegations about him
and that she did so with actual malice, and he won that case.
He was never charged civilly, and he was never charged criminally,
and he was completely vindicated by the jury.
But in answer to your question, I think they do have their man.
And I think the two, just the threshold required, as he know, Pierce to get search warrants for both of his residents is a very high standard in the U.S.
And they had to show probable cause, even to get those warrants.
They got them.
I think the evidence is overwhelming.
And you referred to the Cassie video.
I think that is also devastating.
I think that's going to force him to testify.
and I think he's going to have to do an awful lot better
than he did in that apology video
if he's going to convince one or two jurors
to hang that jury.
I don't like his chances.
And how significant is the likes of Myla Morales
who I just interviewed who in 2010
before that other incident,
which we saw on that horrific video,
years before that,
she was with Cassie after she'd been attacked
by Diddy on that occasion?
How important could that be if it comes to it?
Oh, I think it's very important.
And I think your video is so damaging at any trial, whether it's criminal or civil, because it's hard to explain away.
If there isn't video or if there isn't audio, then there's open to doubt.
But when you've got the audio tape or videotape, it's just, as you know, so devastating.
But I think the corroborating witnesses will be helpful too.
but they're just going to confirm what we've seen with our own eyes.
One of the problems with big high-profile celebrity trials of any nature
is that you're always going to get some people trying it on.
You want to maybe make money, make fame, whatever it may be out of it.
You've been involved in these kind of things.
How do you sort of weed out, if you like, the wheat from the chaff
when it comes to these kind of situations?
Well, it's very difficult because you get,
when you're representing somebody high profile, you get a lot of calls, and a lot of them are
from crazy people or people who want to get their own 15 minutes of fame. But there are,
we've got some very good leads, anonymous leads, that panned out. So you really have to run each
one down and you can't be complacent. You can't assume that something you're
being told is not true. You have to run each lead down. You've said that Combs needs to own his
lifestyle when it comes to his defense. Explain what you mean by that. Well, I think for sure he's got
to explain that video. I mean, he absolutely has to explain it. If it's not, if he chooses not to
testify, that will be damning. He's going to have to really take responsibility, not just
mouth the words. When he said that he was sorry, it didn't ring true. I think he's, you know,
I'd like to see more emotion there. I think another complicating factor is the fact that he's
already done the apology video. So you can imagine the prosecutor cross-examining him not only with
respect to the original video, but also with respect to the first apology. So if he does a better
job the second time, people are going to say, well, why are you acting differently? I just think it's a
really, really difficult situation he's in.
And I think he's got to go for juror nullification.
I think he's got to hope for one or two jurors there
who will be willing to disregard the judge's instructions
and willing to disregard the evidence
and go for, you know, some kind of conspiracy theory
or something like that.
But I think that's his best hope.
Let me turn to Rob Schueter.
You were part of Diddy's publicity team.
How long did you work for him?
Early 2000, so I started in about 2001, left in about 2004, 2005.
And what was your sense of the kind of person you were working for?
He was driven, he was rude, he was vulgar, he was charming, he was everything that you think a celebrity might be.
I was pretty early on in my PR career, and he was probably my first big star.
In many ways, he taught me how to be a publicist.
He was hands-on.
He loved being a celebrity more than any of.
ever star I've ever worked with.
And he was also charming.
And I hate to use that word because I'm going to look so naive here.
But thinking back in that period, he was charming.
He had a big smile.
And I think this is why he probably got away with it for so long.
You know, I met him a couple of times.
I met him at a dinner in London.
I met him at an Oscars party in L.A.
I remember the conversation.
We had a conversation about iPhones against BlackBerry's.
And in London, I had quite long.
conversation with him. And I saw that charming side to him both times. I was genuinely shocked
when all this stuff put out because I'd never seen another side to him. But a lot of people,
and I'll bring in DJ Vlad here, I don't think this is such a shock to a lot of people in the
hip-hop world, is it? I don't think it's a total shock. But you're also seeing the hundreds and hundreds
of civil lawsuits. I think most of them are nonsense. I think most of them will be either thrown
out or settled at pennies on the dollar. I mean, Vlad did just do it. Just do.
explore that. I mean, what seems extraordinary to people now when we see the sheer scale of these
indictments and the sheer volume of people who have been caught up in this is why on earth
this wasn't blown up years ago? Why do you think that was? Well, I think the Cassie lawsuit. I think
when that actually became public and you saw the big spotlight on it in the same way that you saw
the R. Kelly, you know,
documentary come out.
The same thing that happened with Harvey Weinstein
when it got international attention.
I think that law
enforcement, their ears perked
up and they saw this as a way
to actually jump on the bandwagon
and to probably make a career
with the prosecutor.
Jason, on Sunday, any batches?
Peers, I haven't...
Sorry, Jason. I have an idea.
I want to just piggyback on
what Vlad said, and Vlad could agree, because
Vlad and I, you know, we were tapped into the culture daily.
You know, these freakoffs that we're hearing about, I never heard the term freakoff
ever, and I've been around for a long time, but we have heard of freaknik.
And if you think about freak sneak sneak back in the day, Freakneek was a cultural destination
where every rapper, every woman, everybody wanted to go to where the purposes of flying
Atlanta was to go out there, have a good time, have sex, hook up with all these people.
So that culture back in the 90s was something that the culture thrived on.
And that was at a time we didn't have social media,
Me Too, cancel culture, all those things.
Now, fast forward, Vlad will tell you,
there was lots of conversation when the Freakneek documentary came out
because people didn't want to be associated with that error in time
that they may have been participating in in a time we're in now.
And so where you see that people are shaming the freakoffs,
there was a lot of these activities that have been happening over the decades.
And now what the hip-hop community is resonating with is,
who's next?
How is it going to catch up with me?
I don't want to be affiliated with it.
There's a lot of Diddy friends that I can tell you whose names are being rumored to have been around these situations that are being extremely silent right now because it's almost like a contagious flu and they don't want to catch it.
Right. I mean, Vlad, on Sunday, new lawsuits dropped against Diddy. In one of them, he's accused of sexually assaulting a businessman in 2022 before a quote, well-known athlete put a stop to it.
Another one says you raped a 13-year-old girl at a VMA after party in 2000, alongside an unnamed male celebrity as a female star looked on.
There's got to be a lot of very famous people who were, as Jason says, who were around this scene, around Diddy, around his entourage, everything else, who were reading stuff like this and gulping very loudly that they might get dragged in on there?
Well, I think people are scared to get dragged into the criminal charge.
In terms of civil cases, you can name whoever you want to name.
Lawyers really don't have to do that much due diligence.
There's so many fake lawsuits out there.
But for example, I had Tare, the journalist, recently on my show,
and he had actually done an interview recently where he talked about he had one of his male cousins.
He actually called Diddy and got him an internship at Bad Boy.
And soon afterwards, he actually ended up quitting.
And then he told Tare afterwards that,
that Diddy demanded that he spent the night with him
in order to keep his job.
So he ended up ultimately quitting his job.
You know, Diddy has always, you know, kind of hid his real sexuality.
I personally think he's bisexual.
And I think this will come out at some point.
I don't know why he doesn't come out already
because there's been so many stories from people like Toree
who are actually credible.
And, you know, from people that actually,
like his cousin who is not trying to sue,
who's not trying to get publicity off of it,
but these stories have been circulating.
And there's absolutely nothing wrong with being bisexual.
But he should come forward with it
because there are so many allegations at this point.
Yeah, I mean, Ben Chu, this issue of other unnamed stars at the moment
who may or may not get pulled in,
how likely is it that these names are all going to emerge?
I think it is likely,
and I would respectfully disagree with DJ on that one
because I think even if there's no criminal liability for these people who are onlookers,
they can really lose a lot in the court of public opinion.
And if you're a prominent individual and you witnessed criminal or other just depraved behavior
and you look the other way, that can be devastating to your career.
So I think there are a lot of people who were checking their role at Texas
and making sure they weren't at particular parties
because I think it can ruin careers.
And Rob Schueter, you know, one of these, I just named one of these incidences
in one of the new batch of losses was from 2000.
That's around the time you began to work for Diddy.
Did you, in the time you were from,
have to deal with allegations that came directly to you
for a response of any kind in that period?
No, none whatsoever, which is why now 20 years later, this is all so shocking.
When I was with Diddy, he was really rising to the peak of his success, and the opposite happened to me.
I had publicists for A-List Stars calling to get their celebrities into his parties.
I was offered $10,000 once to get somebody into his party.
So this was the period when everybody wanted a piece of Diddy.
Massive companies, too, Clive Davis, Anna Winter at Vogue, Estée Lourke.
order or wanted a piece of Puffy.
So when I was with him, it felt as if he was the king of the world.
And I didn't hear any of these rumors.
I heard a few rumors that he was gay.
I know he had a gay uncle that he would talk about a lot as an inspiration for his fashion
collection.
But I did not hear the sinister rumors.
A little titillation about him maybe being bisexual, but nothing really sinister.
In fact, I thought Puffy was a phony.
I thought he pretended to be like a gangster, pretend.
to be tough, where in reality, he was the first to go to bed.
After these parties, he would throw.
He'd be the first call I'd get in the morning, maybe 6 a.m., figuring out what can we leak to page 6,
what can we leak to the entertainment shows.
And so all I saw was this working machine 24-7.
And he was obsessed with Prince Harry and William, wasn't he?
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
He used to ask me all the time.
I'm British.
I live here in America.
but he would ask me all the time.
I think because I'm British, he thought that I knew them,
and I did not.
However, I read the newspapers like everybody else,
and each day he would text me or call me,
wanting to know what was going on with the princes.
He asked me on more than maybe 10 occasions
if I could get an invite to the palace.
I tried to try to get them to one, two, three of his parties.
They never did turn up.
And then what was really bizarre, too,
is when I'd go to his apartment,
he had an entire townhouse, basically, on Park Avenue.
you, when you turned up at his house, you'd go upstairs in the elevator,
although you would go through security, which I thought was a little weird, like at an airport.
He had metal detectors when you walked into his home.
You'd go up to where he lives, and he would have photographs of him and lots and lots of
celebrities.
He loved celebrities, but he also had a picture, a framed picture, of Harry and William, which
I thought was quite strange.
Very, sounds like a lucky escape that they didn't go to those parties.
Vlad, this issue of 50 cent, and his, you know, as he said, he spoke to People magazine
defending his criticism of Diddy, say, look, it seems like I'm doing some really outrageous things,
but I haven't.
It's really me just saying what I've been saying for 10 years, which is kind of true.
For 10 years he's been calling out, Diddy and others.
Has he been vindicated, 50 Cent, do you think?
I mean, I don't think 50 ever really liked Diddy.
Tony Yeo is a regular on my show, and that's Diddy's right-hand man.
And he's always said that whenever they would have meetings with Diddy, he'd be like, listen, I don't like him, but I'll hear what he has to say.
And I remember on Drink Champs, he had this one instance where he talked about where he was, I guess, talking to Diddy, and Diddy offered to take him shopping?
And he was like, what, like, I'm a girl?
Like, I'm a hot girl that you take shopping?
Like, that's ridiculous.
So, you know, I think that Diddy always, you know, rub 50 cents the wrong way and 50 always had a disdain of him.
that this is happening.
Diddy's just joining into the, I mean, sorry,
50 is actually joining into the circus.
And he's coming out with his own documentary.
It's going to be on Netflix.
I'm sure that's going to be epic.
Jason, you know this world very well.
There's a lot of conflation.
There's a lot of conflation happening, though,
because what 50 has been critical about is that,
what he said is that Diddy was gay.
This whole, all the trolling on breakfast club
and everywhere around media,
social media has been about Diddy's sexuality.
I haven't heard him say Diddy slept with a little kid.
I haven't heard him say,
They diddy drugged people.
I mean, I haven't, but, you know, if somebody else has, let me know.
I think that there's just been so many different misinterpretations or connections of things that are that are just muddying the water, right?
Diddy parties and Diddy After Dark, two different things.
So a lot of celebrities that are afraid to be tied to Diddy After Dark are not coming forward saying like, hey, yeah, we've been to a Diddy Party.
I've been to a Diddy Party.
So I think, you know, trying to make sense of all of it, you know, has been mind-boggling because there are so many things being connected to things.
that are not a thing.
And from what you're hearing, Jason,
do you think there's a lot more dominoes to fall here?
Absolutely.
I mean, I'll put a name out there that was really close to Puffy,
which has been ironically very silent,
and I mean silent, is Naomi Campbell.
Naomi Campbell is somebody that is connected to people
all over the world, rich, powerful people,
and her name, you know, has been coming up a lot recently,
and she's been very silent on Diddy,
the relationship, you know, wishing any well wishes to the kids.
I mean, she's pretty much, she was been around through all of these things.
And, you know, there's, I think, a lot more to come.
And people are very afraid of their name being brought into it
because we all don't know what are on those tapes.
We don't know what's on the cell phones.
We don't know what's, but we all know that the law knows.
And soon we should probably find out.
Yeah, I mean, look, I know Naomi Campbell,
she's not here to defend herself
I don't think you're making
any allegation against her but she
certainly hasn't said nothing and there are a lot
of people around did he that haven't
and I can understand
that if you're completely innocent but you did
know him and go to lots of parties or whatever
you don't want to be tainted by this
so the silence may not be complicit
it might just be fear of getting
contaminated you don't think so Jason
no no no no peers
no no peers first of all
peers there are three deadly people
this panel, me and you and DJ Vlad, they do not like the fact that the three of us are here talking
right now. For me, if you showed up to every Diddy party, now not the Diddy after Dart per se,
and I don't know who did or didn't, but if you showed up to every Diddy party, every Diddy party
or Diddy show up to all of your parties, and all of a sudden now the world is in a crisis
and you're nowhere to be found and you're trying to stop everybody from talking. One would say
Smokey the Bear is near the smoke because there may be a fire. I don't know. I'm not saying
any allegations, what I will say,
what I will say is that
I sip Sirrock at a
ditty party and went home. I didn't sip
Sorok at a ditty party and stay the night.
And those people that did are
going to have a hard time explaining things when
the chips start falling. Look, I think it
is going to get bigger before it gets
to the end of this involving a lot of people.
Let me bring back Ben Chou.
You put Johnny Depp on the stand.
It's always a high-risk strategy. It worked
for you. If you were
representing Sean Did he come?
Would you put him up?
Well, we put Johnny up because he was telling the truth.
So that was a very easy decision to make.
And he had the burden of proof.
And frankly, we couldn't have stopped him even if we wanted to,
but we didn't want to.
And telling the truth, as he did over several days,
if you're not telling the truth,
skilled attorneys on the other side are going to puncture that.
So I believe in that system.
I think in this case, I don't think he's got any choice given that video.
He's got to explain it.
He's got to say that he's terribly sorry for it, but that was an aberration.
That's not who he is.
He simply has to say that.
He has to own it and say, I did a horrible thing.
I'll regret it the rest of my life.
But that doesn't mean that I engaged in sex trafficking.
And he's got to look the jury in the eye.
and say that and say it convincingly.
If he is found guilty of all charges,
how long could he be convicted for?
How long could he be sentenced to?
I'm afraid that he may never see the light of day.
I mean, these are extraordinarily serious felonies
that he's been charged with.
So if he's found guilty on some or all of them,
I think he'd be a very old man by the time he's out
if he gets out at all.
Vlad, as there often is with these things,
according to the website chart metric,
the latest data shows that Diddy's numbers
on music streaming services are actually increasing
throughout this whole period,
as are his numbers on social media apps like TikTok,
Facebook and so on.
You know, it's a kind of ambulance-chasing element to this
where people go where the drama is.
But what about the morality of this?
I mean, we discuss this with all of these cases, really,
don't we, about where art meets alleged crime,
or scandal, is it okay to listen to Diddy's music now?
Should streamers be making money out of Diddy, record companies, etc.?
I mean, there's the music, and then there is the person making the music, and the two don't always coincide.
People still play R. Kelly.
R. Kelly has timeless songs, not only that he performed, but, you know, you are not alone by Michael
Jackson, which was written by R. Kelly.
you know there's so many people that did horrible things
in entertainment and people still love their films
Roman Polansky
raped an underage girl I think like a 13 year old girl
but you know his movies are still being watched
and everything else like that
you know you just see this over and over again
and people ultimately they like what they like
and if they like a piece of art
they're going to ignore the actual artist
and some of the crazy things that they've done.
Now, some people are going to draw a line.
But as you could see, I mean, he's getting more publicity
so people are going back into his catalog.
Yeah.
It's not surprising at all.
No, it's not surprising.
Whether it's right, it's another matter.
Thank you to my panel.
Excellent debate.
Really appreciate it.
