The Right Time with Bomani Jones - Alexandra Stapleton on Diddy's rise and fall; Breaking down Netflix's "Sean Combs: The Reckoning" | 12.12
Episode Date: December 12, 2025Bomani Jones is joined by Alexandra Stapleton, director of "Sean Combs: The Reckoning." First, they discuss 50 Cent's involvement in the documentary and how he helped bring this story to life. Later,... they break down the rise of Diddy and Bad Boy Records and how that helped to mold the "Diddy" persona. Finally, Bomani reacts to the possibility that Diddy was involved in Tupac's tragic shooting and breaks down what the documentary tells us about hip-hops place in society. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the right time, a wave original.
My name is Beaumani Jones.
Thanks for listening wherever you get your podcast.
Thanks for watching us on YouTube.
Subscribe, like, rate us, review us, give us five stars.
You only give us four stars.
I'm inclined to believe you are a hater.
All right, we have got a guest joining us this time.
I want to introduce you to her.
Her resume is kind of wild, man.
She's the director of the prime video documentary Reggie on Reggie Jackson that I need to see
and I have not seen.
She also did a documentary series on a book, well, what was a,
book called How Music Got Free, which I have read, but I did not know there was a documentary.
So I'm really looking forward to check this out. And as is Jermaine to this here program, she's
the director of Sean Combs, The Reckoning on Netflix, the Diddy documentary. Her name is
Alexandria Stapleton. Alexander, how are you? I'm great. Thank you for having me.
No, hey, man, we got to, you know, whenever we can have Houston people doing, you know, dope things
for the city, like we are totally here for this. We got a hater named Joel who listens to the show,
who was going to be our backup Diddy guest. So Houston.
and Houston is holding this all the way down.
But I have so many questions about this documentary.
I've talked about it on the show.
I recommend to people watch it, check it out.
I think it is very interesting.
I think the first question I have is really kind of chronologically to me,
what I imagine for you is the first step of the process,
which is at some point there's a phone call from 50 Cent who says,
I want to do this documentary about this guy that I don't really like that much.
And I'm very curious how that goes on your end when you receive this call.
Well, it didn't, it wasn't as fan, it wasn't as fantastical as that.
50 and I, you know, had met earlier, actually through Eminem on how music got free.
Eminem was a executive producer on that project.
And so prior to Cassie's lawsuit dropping, we actually were working on other projects, other documentary projects with GUNIT and my company, House of Nonfiction.
And so we were developing things.
and then the lawsuit dropped, Cassie's lawsuit.
And of course, you know, that's the, that went everywhere, you know, rapid pace.
I, we didn't talk about it on that day, but I, you know, just wanted to wrap my head around, you know, is there a story here?
I mean, it immediately was very fascinating to me.
And then she settled and then it kind of like, the light went out, you know, like, and it was like, wait a minute, you just dropped a bunch of knowledge, a bunch of allegations.
And so I just, you know, started trying to find other leads and other ways to potentially look under the hood of that story.
And, you know, simultaneously, 50 was public about wanting to do a documentary series or a doc about the same subject matter.
So then we linked up and spoke about it.
And we had a really long conversation.
It was actually very, he knows my filmmaking style in that, you know,
For me, this was, there was no conversation about, like, how do we create, you know, a BS piece of content just for some sort of, you know, like, thing that had nothing to do with the allegations.
The goal was to talk about, you know, to talk about the subject matter and to understand and unpack, like, how complex and nuanced and, you know, just it was going to be a really heavy conversation.
Now, executive producer in this industry is a very broad term.
So what was his involvement in the actual production?
Well, you know, he's been really public about that and interviews that we've done together.
He was definitely, you know, as we were putting the pieces together, because everyone has to remember, this is before there was any indictment.
This is before the raid.
This is all that was actually really out there was this lawsuit.
So, you know, in trying to talk to people and get people to open up to me,
50's involvement as a figure of the culture and someone who makes a project feel like this is going to go.
This isn't just some, you know, random filmmaker who's going to come and collect knowledge and get,
because there was a lot of paranoia in that time frame where people felt very scared to talk to anybody
because they didn't know if what they were saying was going to be confidential.
or was it going to just be put on social media?
So there was a credibility, you know, I think a factor with 50 being attached to this.
And we both really felt that in telling the story, we didn't want to destroy the culture of hip hop, you know, but through the allegations of one man.
So that was one component, you know, and getting certain people to the table.
And there's obviously voices in there of people that are, that love Sean and are very much, you know, speaking in his defense.
So that was not, you know, that really did not have anything to do with 50.
And then as the project, you know, went on, I would share, you know, when I got to rough cuts,
I would start sharing it with him and would get his feedback.
And, you know, he's put it out there that he, we would talk about things.
He, you know, had feedback and suggestions.
And he, and I either adopted it or I didn't, you know.
But it was usually more about the filmmaking.
that like, let's cut this story point. You know, we never got into to conversations about that.
It was just like, oh, this part flows or, you know, he's, he has a lot of skill, obviously. He's a man
who's been making content for over a decade. And his narrative skill making, you know, what he does
in the narrative space is tremendous. And so I think that people forget that he is a really,
he's an amazing storyteller in his own right. Right. Now, this is an ambitious project to jump on for a lot
of the reasons that you discussed, but also, as you mentioned, not wanting to make this an attack
on the culture of hip hop, but at the same time, the culture of hip hop is a major character
in the totality of this. So when you started doing this, did you have an idea in mind about
how you wanted to address the culture and the industry surrounding versus just the story
from the lawsuit? Well, you know, whenever I approach a story, there's always the macro and the micro.
Like, that's always, like, I literally, you know, usually start with a list for each, you know, here's the big context and here's the story of, you know, characters or one character. And for this, it was a dance. It was, I only had four hours. And so, of course, when I started this, I wanted to go deeper. I wanted to understand, you know, the patterns of this type of behavior that predate Sean Combs. Because allegations like this don't just start with Sean Combs. This is,
You know, there's a lot of history in the music business just as a whole with, you know,
similar allegations and abuses. And so, but, you know, as you start to put something together,
you realize, you know, in telling his story and also what was available to me, because there were a lot of
people that would not sit with me and I can't just make things up. You know, I can't just, like,
there's no narrator and I'm not just going to read from, you know, books or,
or articles, like, I actually need firsthand accounts of things.
So I have to kind of pivot as a documentarian
as to like making a piece based on the people
that are sitting with me.
And that is kind of like where you see
and how you see the series shaping up.
And it very much became more of an intimate portrait
about Sean and the ecosystem that he came into,
you know, because people also forget
that hip hop was a really small community at that time,
period. Everyone kind of knew each other, especially in the streets of New York, you know. And so,
so I just, you know, I used the time that I had with four episodes to really make that make sense.
And then so that when you understand what he did in creating bad boy, you would have context
to that. And then even when we get into, you know, the East Coast, West Coast, I say that like this,
that you understand that for so long, I think that that's always been true.
treat it like, oh, L.A. is a different world, a different, you know, these are people that didn't even
know each other. And it was really important for me to break down, no, these, you know, Shug Knight
goes all the way back to Uptown. That's where he learns, you know, like the music business.
Like, and that these are relationships that go, that were really, really deep.
Yeah. And so in only having four hours and truly covering a span of time, I mean,
is Sean Combs' life is almost 60 years, but I think it's fair to.
say we're really talking about a span of 30 years is really getting into this right early 90s into the early
2020s only having four episodes and with some pretty like clear hallmarks to get to like you know episode
two really is largely 1995 to 1996 right like is that kind of time period how did you figure out
or decide how do you allocate the time because it's not even like you can just say okay we've gone
this far in time we stop the episode every episode has to stop you know have a have not
just a point of stopping, but a stopping point that lets you resume.
Mm-hmm.
I think that, you know, that getting in and out of the hours was less about being measured
with the timeline.
You know, oh, we did, this is 10 years, this is 10 years, and this will be 10 years,
or 5 or whatever.
It was more about breaking it down for story, you know, for people to understand the journey
of, you know, Sean Combs.
And so the first episode is sort of like all the way up through, you know, the creation of bad boy.
And so you're ending that note with like, okay, we tried to put out there.
What did he learn?
What did he adopt?
You know, what was happening?
The fact that he came from party promoting and how he used and parlayed those skills into the label.
But along the way, as we were tracking his progress.
with what he actually did contribute to hip hop, which is extraordinary.
You know, there was also, like, kind of like under the hood,
what were these allegations that were happening.
And I think that when, you know, again, starting this with Cassie's lawsuit,
I think there were a lot of people that, you know, because this is hitting so many different age groups.
So for me, I grew up with all this stuff.
Like, but, you know, there's, there's Jen Ziers who, like, they know, know Sean Combs,
just as like making the band.
That's where he starts in the story.
So I wanted to just kind of go back enough
to get people to understand
sort of like his origin story.
But as we're doing that,
to unpack allegations that were coming out,
you know, as I was making it.
And to kind of understand that that was,
it predated Cassie.
So what he contributed to hip hop,
I actually think is an interesting part
in where I, as I watch it,
I kind of go back and forth because I see things that he helped to make bigger.
But it feels like to me at least, and I'm curious your thoughts on this,
just about everything that he contributed was something that somebody else had done already.
I mean, you know, that's a way of looking at it.
I think it does take a certain, you know, like it takes a lot of energy to create
and to run a record label.
I mean, I think we could all, you know.
to run a business like that is is is a big Herculane beat.
And he was so young to do it.
You know what I mean?
So I think that just in the creation of that,
and that's also why Kirkborough's story, you know, again,
was so important because I think there was a little bit of the myth of like he was all by himself.
And that was that also became important, you know, when talking about bad boy,
well, it wasn't just Sean Combs, you know.
it was, you know, this group of women and men because, you know, I mean, they were so young and like,
and like spirited, you know, and they were really putting their mark, you know, on a culture that
was still being developed. So, you know, you could take it like that or you could look at, you know,
creating an empire is, that is a part of the work that was needed, you know, to create the vessel,
you know, in the machine for all of these things to operate in.
So one of the things that we get to early in this is the infamous celebrity basketball game at CC&Y.
They turn into a disaster with multiple people being trampled.
I admit until the documentary, I don't think I appreciated the magnitude of what a big deal that game was.
Like, I'm curious for you if that's one of the things that when you got into this, you were like, oh, I knew this was, I knew this happened, but not necessarily.
Like, I didn't think I had one rapper who participated in the game hit me up.
I was like, oh, wow, he was there.
I had somebody else who said this, and it was like,
I just thought that this was like those celebrity games
when I was in college that would just pop up.
And they were just like, oh, okay, it's a celebrity game.
And it's the dude who did after 12 before 6 and his partners,
and they play in basketball.
This was a thing thing in New York City.
Yes.
And that's exactly how I felt.
I had heard about it.
But reading about it or hearing about it or hearing it, you know,
mentioned in articles is very different than when we started getting the footage in,
you know, and, you know,
and actually, I mean, there's so much more footage that exists.
And I think that to just sit in that and to see the aftermath of that
and to really understand how the unbelievable tragedy of that
and that there were nine people that were unalived, you know,
the nine people that lost their lives so young.
And then, you know, the family all, this is a very traumatic event,
a very traumatic event, I'm sure, to survive.
it, but to be witness to it.
And so, and I think it was really, really interesting, you know, to even, I was very blown
away of just seeing Sean, you know, in that footage and just looking, you know, like, it just
felt like kind of like what you would imagine, like a war zone to be or something, you know,
just like this incredible tragedy and all these people around you.
And he just looked so lost and dumbfounded.
And so I think that, you know, that's a part of making documentaries is like when you actually have the footage,
all of a sudden the experience becomes more visceral in the storytelling.
You know, and that footage is one thing I want to talk to you as we go along more about like the use of footage that is jarring because it was very jarring.
Like to see the pictures of people on the ground in the gym with the blankets over them and all of that.
what struck me, though, was watching when
Colmes is talking to the press, and he's, you know,
he's giving his story about, which I thought was an amazing piece of game.
The only thing that matters is making sure this never happens again.
Like, like you wasn't there, right?
Like, this has absolutely nothing to do with you.
And I think it was the first moment when I watched him there that I said to myself,
and it continued, there are some people who I know who are around who have tried to make the argument that,
like, oh, you know, when he was puffy, he was one guy.
and then he became Diddy and he was another guy.
But I watched that and it was like, oh, no, this seems like this has been the same guy the whole way through.
Just a lot of us on the outside weren't wise.
But it seemed to be pretty constant.
Like there's no inflection point in his voyage where he becomes a different person, just one in different circumstances.
Yeah, his reaction to that, I thought it was really important to include in the film because it's kind of his first, you know, it's his entree to the press.
It's his debutante to the world beyond, you know, what he had created already with party promoting.
And, you know, he's still a very low-level, you know, employee of Uptown.
This isn't even like, you know, an executive, like who's doing this.
I think that that, that, and for him to get a press conference and to know how to, how to handle that and what to say and to kind of, you know, be very, you know, even like the, the tenor of his voice.
I found to be interesting and how you can hear, you know, how he speaks, you know,
and then when you start putting these pieces together and the timeline together, it's,
it feels it, you're like, oh, that reminds me of 1991, you know, so I find it to be
very interesting.
I also feel like the reaction of him, you know, by Andre Harrell not being fired and being able
to continue to like blast off with his career, you know, was also just,
and just something interesting to see.
The Andre Harrell part also thought was interesting because most of us who are like of a certain
age, you know the uptown story and the fact that he worked with Andre.
One thing that I found to be very interesting and it was kind of subtle in this is
I felt the doc suddenly made the point that while there are some things that are very
particular to Puff, but it's also kind of the world that he came from. And one of them we talked
about, well, you know, at Uptown, they found a way to make sure you didn't get anything other
than your dance. And that's what Puff learned. And yes, that's about him, but that also speaks to
the larger industry. And I'm, I found that to be an interesting part of the documentary is those
things about him where it is also made clear, though, that this isn't the only guy who did it,
right? Like, we'd go back to Barry Gordy if we wanted to. You can go back to the 1930, you know, to the
creation of, I mean, the creation of the, you know, the creation of the.
music business and selling records has gone hand in hand with exploiting artists, you know.
And I wish that I had more time, you know, to go.
I mean, of course, like, there's so much more to go into.
And maybe there'll be, you know, maybe this raises an eyebrow for more people, more filmmakers
or, you know, more journalists to go and get into those stories.
But yeah, none of none of that part of, I think, the allegation to get Sean
artists who have, you know, felt chronically exploited by him.
No, Sean Combs did not start that at all.
And he, that's, that just, I think it, especially back then, I think it was just the way the
business worked.
You know, there's no policing of the music industry, you know, at a big level.
It's so different now what, how corporate, you know, things work.
But, yeah, it did not start.
with him. Yeah, like Barry Gordy's story always was, I used the same contract as MGM, right?
Like, I take the exact same one. But as we, as we get past that point, after we go to the
break and a few, I want to talk more about Tupac. But first, I want to just talk one thing that I think
is interesting when you start getting into the era of bad boy is now, as we're talking about,
we are getting into his relationships with the artists that he had. And you prominently feature
Mark Curry in his documentary, who has a book called Dance with the Devil that I think people should
read. I checked that a few years ago. And he was one of the first people to make the point that
everybody who worked with Puff ended up dead in jail or in church, which was a big one in terms of
where he drives people. What was it like for you to do these interviews with people who were
actually affected? Because I think, I don't know if anybody was affected more than Curry was.
It comes out in his face and everything he talks about on screen. Yeah, I mean, there was a lot
that went into that. I think that there was a design to that.
where I wanted to talk to people that could speak beyond just,
I wanted to speak with people that had kind of been trying to put this on the map for a very long time
because I knew that there would be, you know, in watching this that people might feel like,
oh, well, you're just, you know, you just came and spoke out against Sean Combs to pile on
post-Case's lawsuit.
And, you know, in starting to unpack and investigate in doing the research,
I realized there were quite a few people that were kind of sounding the alarm, you know, for various different reasons.
And Mark Curry was one of those people. He wrote a whole book about his time with Bad Boy.
But, you know, Mark Curry also has like a very interesting kind of place in the story where he had, you know, he had so much time in Atlanta.
He, you know, had time. He knew the L.A. dudes that were kind of a part of the story.
and he knew New York because he's, you know, he's like, he's got family ties to all these worlds.
So that is, that started to become really, that started to hit for me that I was like, oh, this is, this is bigger than just Harlem or Mount Vernon, you know, like this, the story of Sean Combs, you can't tell it without kind of getting into Atlanta, without getting into Los Angeles and understanding how all these worlds were kind of, you know, moving together.
And as I say, I think Curry may have been the artist most effective, but I think Kirk Burroughs, who was Diddy's partner in Bad Boy, obviously seems to be the most effective person. And I ask about him because since the film has come out, some of the things that he alleged we've seen pushback from people, the idea that Diddy made the Biggie's funeral of recoupable expense, for example, in questions as to whether or not that happens? For you, what is the process of verifying something that comes from interviews like the ones with Burroughs who seem to have a lot of information that he would have access to.
to the most people would not?
Well, you know, when things are a part of a lawsuit and when we also, you know,
ask for comment, you know, from, from, with these allegations, that's a part of journalism,
you know, and the interesting thing about Kirk is that he's made repeated claims, again,
going all the way back to 2003.
You know, at that time period, he was just like laughed out the courthouse, essentially.
And then, you know, that kind of his lawsuit like went into kind of like kick started a whole bunch of other things, you know, for him.
But I felt like this is interesting to see a man who keeps going back with the same, you know, claims essentially.
You know, there's some additional things in the new suit that he has.
that was very much a part of the story.
And then obviously, you know, I talked to him.
There's a million people that I have spoken with off the record, you know,
that are not in the film.
And then you start to understand Kirk's position from other people, you know,
and what he was around doing at the time.
You know, all I can say with the pushback of the things that he is alleging,
you know, in his civil suit would be for people to,
to look at who's saying those things, you know, and to do the work of, you know, to do the work
of understanding where, where that pushback is coming from. I think that's a part of the
responsibility before, you know, it just goes a lot, you know, it just goes crazy and you're
just believing, you know, anything. And then, and then of course, like, everyone has a right
to come forward with, you know, a pushback, a, you know, other evidence.
but I think it's it's a complicated matter.
You know, Kirk, you're getting into like a lot of technical things about how records are
kept, what his position was.
And there weren't there weren't a lot of people like around, you know, doing that.
So to even break down like how the funeral would have potentially been a part of recoupment,
that's a whole, you know, that's a whole hour.
That's a whole course, you know, of understanding that.
So it's a lot more complex than I think, you know, than the chatter around it.
You touched on something there that I think was interesting, which is the idea that when Burroughs filed this suit in 03, that he was laughed, you know, kind of laughed out.
And it's interesting how many things with Diddy that got laughed away in spite of the things that we knew actually factually happened.
So, for example, we knew that he beat up Steve Stout with a champagne bottle.
Like we knew that this thing happened.
Later, you know, this is not in the film, obviously,
but like the example of him swinging a kettlebell at the strength coach at UCLA.
Like, we have examples of a lot of really wild things that he had done.
Yet somehow we laughed off things that people alleged.
And it wasn't as though, like, we don't think he could do such a thing.
We knew he could.
What did you come away from feeling in doing this movie, like how it was possible that these things could be known,
but also be dismissed, almost in the same breath?
I think that, you know, it taps into like what the bigger message of the series was for me.
And the bigger message was that this is a story that is bigger than Sean Combs.
Actually, what I was trying to do was to turn the mirror on us as a public as to what we accept, dismiss.
Oh, we just make a couple of jokes about let it go or, you know, oh, damn, that was, you know, that was effed up.
like, but like whatever, where is, where is the public's threshold of, um, of holding people
with positions of power and, and fame accountable?
Gotcha.
All right.
Coming up next, we're going to talk about the Tupac and Biggie Chronicles from Shaw Combs
the Reckon.
It's the holiday season and it's time to make dreams come true.
To make these holiday favorites, it takes a team of talented people from actors to
editors, to props people, to sound crew, and more. And when it comes to building such a team,
whether it's for the entertainment industry or a wide range of other industries, you need to hire
the right people. The best way to do that is with ZipRecruiter. And right now, you can try it for
free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Beaumani. You can find out right away how many job seekers in your
area are qualified for your role. With ZipRecruiter's advanced resume database, you can instantly
unlock top candidates' contact info. Make your hiring
a little merrier with ZipRecruiter.
Four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter
get a quality candidate within the first day.
Just go to this exclusive web address right now
to try ZipRecruiter for free.
ZipRecruiter.com slash Beaumani.
Again, that's ZipRecruiter.com slash Beaumani.
ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire.
All right, we are back with Alex Stapleton,
director of Sean Combs, the reckoning.
I mean, there's kind of no easy way to ease into this.
I watched the documentary and came away from it feeling something that I had never really felt before,
which is it seems entirely possible that Diddy had Tupac killed?
That the relationship that he had with not, if only circumstantial, with whatever happened in Las Vegas in September of 1996.
did you go into that learning what you saw,
or is that something that when you began formulating this film
is like, oh, okay, I think this is something we'll talk about.
I did not see, that getting into Tupac's tragic death
is something that happened, you know, organically.
And, you know, I didn't have a clear understanding
of like how much time that we were going to give.
I definitely wanted to make sure that I was opening up more of the backstory that led up
to those events, you know, and I felt like the club shooting in Atlanta, just some of the
back and forth that was going on, even, like I said earlier, really getting people to understand
that there was a relationship that existed or that Sean and should knew each other.
and that Pach knew Biggie and Sean.
You know, that these were all relationships of people that were familiar with each other,
even if they weren't all friends.
And so, you know, I think it's interesting that if the takeaway of this is the takeaway of this.
But what became important to me was that when I had all of the proffer tapes
and all of this, you know, law enforcement material,
that I thought it was important to just let it speak for itself.
Keefei D is the person that is alleging this.
You know, Kifi D is the person who repeatedly, you know, has kind of said the same story.
And Kifidi D is currently in jail awaiting trial for the murder of Tupap.
So I felt like as a, as someone covering the story, he is involving, you know, Sean and putting him into the story.
and how could that be overlooked?
And so I felt like, well, if I'm going to do this,
then we kind of have to unpack it
so that by the time Keefi starts speaking on it,
you kind of understand who all the players are
that he's alleging that we're involved in the story.
And how was it for you as a process balancing his claims
because he is not the most reliable narrator?
Like we could not just have Keevee D speak on his own.
You know, we included interviews with,
with law enforcement, we had a ton of, of, of, uh, of, uh, files that were given to us, um,
for our, you know, own review. Um, and, uh, that was backed up, you know, um, and, you know,
I think that the trial, like, this is everything that exists that, that we had. And now the trial
will be the trial, you know, like that, that is where the, where the legal, the law will,
the legal system will take control of presenting, you know, whatever happens with that. Of course,
you know, as the filmmaking team, we reached out, you know, for a comment from Sean and did not hear
anything back. Did not get any response? Yeah. And I think the film speaks to something that I don't
think I had properly contextualized is this was really a puff and should beef as much if not more
than it was a Tupac and Biggie Beef. Like I remember the 95 Source Awards where Shug, you know,
all up in the videos dancing was the famous part. But I always remember from watching it when
Diddy got to the microphone and he was all the way in the diffuse mode and it always felt in
watching like it was the gangsters on this side and this dude's just running a record label. But
oh, these guys actually seem pretty similar.
Well, it, again, it struck me as being very interesting whenever he has the public, you know, and he's on the mic, and he has the podium, how he presents, you know, himself.
And that is, that is, that is there for people, you know, to make their own, to draw their own conclusions, you know, to, you know, it's, it's constantly this paradox, right, of the public facing Sean Combs and then the Sean Combs.
that that is underneath, you know, the hood and like what's festering, what's brewing and what's
happening, you know, behind closed doors. And his preternatural ability to maximize any situation
in the way that he looks at it, example of that being after Biggie dies and it's time for a
Rolling Stone cover, like actually, that's time for my Rolling Stone cover. And I'm about to put
my album out after this. It's like at every turn, no matter what bad happened, he,
had somehow figured out how he was going to be the guy that came out on top.
I mean, everyone grieves differently.
That's well done.
That's a, that's, that, that, that, he, he definitely grieved in his own way.
That is, that is the way to put this.
It did, it, in part after, kind of in the timeline, between Biggie Dying there is obviously
the shooting at the club and club.
New York that involves Shine and goodness I wish you could have gotten him to sit down because
I mean he's over not he's a politician he's a little bit over it but boy he used to be mad um
there's almost it's not a gap in time between then and when we get to Cassie but it seems like
it felt like the goal of the film was to establish the person that may have been arisen by the time
we get to kind of the late arts in the early teens and his relationship with Cassie but it does
seem that it's like the line from the wire the game didn't change it's got more fierce it does
seemed that by the time you get to the end of that.
He was the same person all the time, but
there definitely seemed to be, it felt darker
and more sinister. Like, is that kind of how
you felt in terms of putting this story together?
Yeah, I mean, I think
that it's a, it's a story
as old as time, right? You know,
what happens when you
have more access to power,
more access to money?
You,
being able to control your narrative,
it becomes, you know, like that there becomes a machine.
It's like hard to penetrate or to alter.
And this is also, again, happening.
I think what's really fascinating is a lot of the story takes place before social media
was like at play or where people could like, you know, just put up their cell phone
and record, you know, someone doing a bad deed, you know, at a club or whatever.
So it was so much easier, I feel like back then to, to, to,
sweet things underneath the rug and to sort of also control legacy media or to control outlets,
you know, that we're reporting on stuff to get people to sway, you know, and to kind of keep
your brand tight. And so I think that it was just the perfect storm for him. You know, I was
like think of like, I did it this film called Shut Up and Dribble, the series called Shut Up and Dribble.
and Scoop Jackson was like, you know, Michael Jordan is like, it's like the perfect storm.
Everything has to align right for Michael Jordan to be like Michael Jordan.
Of course, he's a goat, right?
But like Nike has to be where it's at.
The NBA has to be where it's at.
Chicago Bulls have to be where they're at.
And then you have this player.
And I think there's a similarity with that, especially in the 2000s, with Sean Combs.
again, maybe a bit darker in tone as far as what was going on with these allegations behind closed doors.
But it's like this perfect storm of how he was in the middle of this giant culture shift.
All of these things happening.
He's in the right place at the right time to link up with a liquor company.
Everything happens.
And he has the know-how to start a clothing line.
He's diversifying himself.
But hip-hop was also diversifying.
itself. And hip hop was, you know, Steve Stout wrote the tanning of America.
Yes.
Yeah. This is that time period, you know, and all these guys were benefiting from that. But,
you know, the question becomes, as Sean was building those business opportunities, if
with these allegations, it's like it was, if the allegations are all true, it seems as
So his ecosystem was also designed to kind of keep those things suppressed.
Right.
Now, in expressing a lot of the ideas are telling the story, we talked about this a little earlier
when we talked about the CCNY incident, you had access to a lot of truly jarring footage
to sell a lot of these.
We had access to footage from the murder of Biggie Smalls that we had not seen previously.
Little Rod and the pictures of the guy, the ladies got shot in the bathroom, for example.
you as filmmaker, was there a specific importance to use that, like, the goal to, it's easy to kind of be
like, oh, this is wild internet news, but like to make it such that you, no, no, these are real
things that happen. I mean, it goes back to when we were talking about why, like, C, C, and
why it hits you very hard, you know, I, it, when you have tangible footage, tangible, or even
with Joy Dickerson reading a letter, you know, when you have like these art.
artifacts or art pieces of archival, it of course, it of course kind of puts what the person is saying
and their allegations. It sort of gives you, it becomes a visceral like conversation. And
and there's just no, that's just, there's no denying that, you know. And I think that so much of
how Sean Combs is with, and I have to, you know, say, I've known.
I never met him. Spent a lot of time with him in the edit pay. But I think that he really comes, you start to understand how he speaks to people. It's not, you know, with the Little Rod voicemails. It's like it's not, it's very interesting, you know, the sort of way that he can kind of make you feel like a million dollars, but like cut you and then make you feel like, don't ever ask me for anything. Like, like, and I, to do all of that in 30.
seconds, like, kind of have to hear it in order for it to, to, in order to really understand,
you know, what Little Rod is even talking about. Otherwise, yeah, it seems like crazy. Like,
you, you know, and most people don't work in the music industry. So they're like,
you worked for a guy for a year and like, like, how did you even do that? Like, without
getting paid. That is fantastical, you know, to most people. Yeah. And I think, I think we have
a lot of questions for Little Rod. And that is the, the first one that comes up. I,
in watching this obviously you had all this footage and you had this footage because he's one of
those people who recorded himself all the time and you just mentioned getting yeah he just mentioned
getting to know him at the edit bay and i don't know really how to phrase the question but i'm just
curious the experience of seeing somebody like you just said you got to know him even though
you don't know him like that that feels like a weird dystopian sort of thing to try to like however
long you did this you were it's like you were talking to the chat bot but the chatbot was
Diddy?
Yeah.
I mean, I think I feel that way.
I think my editors feel that way, you know, my showrunner, the producer.
I think we all, like, we, we, you start to understand when you have so much footage,
and there's so much footage that's not even in the film, right?
Like, you start to see his, his, like, his gears, you know, like, there's the gear of being
very performative in the bravado of, like, I'm on camera and I'm on camera and I'm,
I'm going to run this, you know, this situation.
And then there's, you know, moments where you can feel like, oh, he forgot that the camera was there.
Or, you know, there's moments where he's, he's, I mean, I can even tell because this is a man who was, who worked in reality, television for a very long time.
When you work in that space, you know how to turn it on and off when the cameras are rolling.
And you also know that like, oh, this little thing over here that I don't want people to know about, I can cut that out.
You know, so if I, if I let loose a little bit, I'm going to be, I'm going to be okay.
And you see all those gears at play, or we did, you know, in making this.
And I think that it almost felt like as a filmmaker, it almost felt like I spent, like I actually filmed him.
But, you know, it's really just because of the, of his quest to always be filming everything about his life.
So you have mentioned the extent that you and this production has gone through to protect the identity of the filmmaker from whom, you know, where all this film came from.
I ask you to clarify this because honestly, I feel silly almost asking, but doesn't Diddy know who was filming them all the time?
That's a question for Diddy.
There we go. I'll ask them next time I see him. But in the end, it's a.
interesting to hear you say that
you viewed this as much
as a mirror for the
public to put before themselves and
ask how this happened. And I feel like
a part of expressing that point was
the jurors being present
in the documentary. Were you surprised
that they wanted to, or is this?
Like I felt like when Ezra Edelman did OJ. Made in America
and he had the jurors, they had
20 years of being called basically stupid
black people, and they didn't, they felt
like there was an explanation to be given.
I didn't, I
I was surprised that for this trial, the jurors, especially so soon, would have wanted to have been a part of it.
Did that surprise you at all?
Yes and no.
Yes and no.
I think if you had to ask me, like, during the trial, like, oh, when this is all over and, you know, of course, we're going to do our reach out to try to find these jurors, are they going to say yes?
I probably would have been like a fat chance, right?
But it was such a similar to OJ's trial.
It kind of, I feel like it started out pretty serious.
And it just kind of like became a circus, you know, like the actual proceedings at the, like outside of the courthouse.
I guess.
And I wouldn't say that the courtroom was a circus.
But I feel like the jurors, you know, there, I just feel like there was a lot of adrenaline going.
And I think that transferred potentially over to them.
And for them, I think, you know, I think they were very adamant to speak, to share, like, this is how we got to this verdict, you know, and they felt very proud of their decision.
But it was just a curious, like, it was like a very interesting energy. And, and, you know, honestly, like, we, I spoke to more jurors. These were the two that we actually filmed with, but there could have been more, you know, I just, we weren't really doing.
like the trial as like an episode.
Right.
But and they all, they all, they all were very, not every single juror, but the jurors that
I did speak with.
They were, they were totally fine and okay with being filmed.
Yeah.
And I do think I came away, like I think as unsettling as Islam may have been for some people,
I think there was something to it.
But, you know, domestic violence was not one of the charges.
Like, I felt like I came away from it in much like the OJ documentary.
The OJ documentary, I came away with two thoughts.
I came away more certain than ever that OJ killed those people
and more certain than ever that he should have been acquitted.
Like as counterintuitive as that may seem,
I felt in this also to a degree, like I see,
I see why on those larger charges there was an acquittal.
Was there, was what you were doing at all an attempt to explain
what the jurors may do or how the outcome came to be
or just a retelling of the events themselves?
I think it was giving, like giving their purpose.
perspective, you know, like a window into their perspective. I think beyond the, um, beyond the actual
verdict decision, I thought it was interesting, you know, and especially because we, we were able to,
you know, was able to secure an interview with Capricorn Clark. Um, so I thought that it was
interesting, um, to, to, for me to sit down with Capricorn and to kind of understand like, where,
she emotionally was, you know, and I think that this was like a lot for her.
You know, I think as you, this was also something that's very nuanced, but like Kirk Brose has
had a couple of decades to kind of sort of be at peace with how he tells this story because
there's so much time that has gone past.
Capricorn kind of, I feel like for her, and I think it's a fair representation to say this,
I feel like she was very surprised when Cassie's lawsuit dropped.
She was just thrust into like this very, you know, the trial of the century.
And she's a part of it.
And she's a part of like a very big part of like, you know, a car bomb and, you know,
like this whole like crazy story.
And she's in the center of that.
And, you know, and she has like a very long relationship with both Cassie and Sean, you know,
in working with both of them.
So it sort of was interesting because to me, when I'm interested,
interviewing people, it's like you can meet people where they are to understand, well, she's going to, you know, a lot of this is very visceral for her, potentially even retramatizing her. So she may not be the perfect person in articulating herself at every minute on a stand. It's very interesting to hear the juror's perspectives that that kind of meant that they took that, that meant something different for them. Right. And I think also in making this movie, something,
that I guess people, I think a lot of people know,
but most people don't necessarily think about is there are no cameras in federal court,
right?
So we just get the weird old pictures, right?
The scribbles.
Very weird.
Yeah, they come out.
And I would, like, that trial is so interesting because in the film, for example,
like we got to see a lot of like the recreations of emails that were sent between
Kazi and Diddy, you know, and all these different things.
And we would see them.
But obviously, through no fault of your own, it feels like that's kind of the missing
peace in this is to see what it was like in those moments, right? With him looking like Frederick
Douglas because he can't get no shoe polish while he's in jail to touch his shit up. And then all
these things are going on and he's there. And at the end, he's on his knees. Like, it's the wildest
scene. And I can only imagine how jealous a filmmaker has to be that you know this is there and just
can't get a hell of it. Yeah. I mean, I, yeah. It's like, it's, it's, it's really frustrating because
like going back to comparing it to the OJ trial,
I feel like OJ was televised, right?
But the jurors were sequestered.
Yes.
This is the opposite.
So it's like that was that.
And then this was like non-sequestered jurors, but no TV's in the courthouse.
Very interesting.
Yeah, I think cameras being there would, I can only imagine like how the dynamic change would have been.
For better or for worse for Sean Combs, I'm not sure.
but it would be really interesting if the public could have seen things.
And yeah, the drawings are, it's almost like the drawings make it like even more not real.
Yeah.
Because like all of that.
So as we start to wrap this, I am terrible when people ask me the most or the biggest or whatever.
But I am curious if there's anything that jumps out to you as being.
something really interesting to you that you came across in working on this that you had not known or were not aware of before you started working on this film.
Oh, man. I mean, there's a lot that I didn't know. I mean, as far as like just basic level facts, I mean, I think for me, like opening up, you know, the second episode and like I said, really going back to the winding, the winding road of how all these people knew each other was.
was really fascinating to me.
I should have a prepared answer for this because I feel like when I'm with 50,
like he's, he's, he's, he can't, maybe he's been answering this more than me, but I, I think it, I think what, I, probably the biggest thing that was a, that was, that was, that I had to grapple with was kind of a question and I
ask myself and it was a part of the reason as to why I started it, which was like, as a culture,
this is going back to like, this is about us, right? As a community of people in a post-me-2 world,
like when we, when the egg is cracked open and we have, you know, allegations like this
in the hip-hop space and in the hip-hop community, like what will the reaction be? And I think that,
you know, I think that like the film is kind of still asking the question of that.
I don't think I'm giving.
I cannot give that answer.
I'm just a filmmaker, you know, like.
And I, but what I do think is interesting is how I really, I thought that maybe I would be more added.
We would have more of an ending by now.
But it almost feels like this is the beginning of like a new chapter and new conversations and new ways to analyze.
again, not just Sean Combs, but I hope that this really starts to lead into conversations about analyzing our legal system and, you know, how we handle conversations about victims, how our legal system handles allegations, you know, for victims.
So, yeah, it's just a, it's just a slice of time, a piece, a reflection piece, and yeah.
All right.
That is Alexandria Stableton.
She is the director of Sean Combs, the Reckoning.
I want to read some more of this stuff
from your bio because everything in here
is like, wow, this sounds really cool.
You got a fourth-cover documentary
on Terrell Owens in partnership
with Skydance that is coming.
You directed one part of God Save Texas,
the price of oil, a documentary series
that HBO did.
And we talked earlier about
how music got free and Reggie Jackson.
I got some things to go check,
so I wanted to go let the other people know
if they wanted to see more of your work,
how they could get it.
And I appreciate you joining us.
Yeah, and I got another, it's announcing today that.
Oh, yes, Brittany Grindrville.
So H-Town.
Yes, 2020-26 on ESPN, the Brittany Griner film is coming.
So I appreciate you joining us.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
All right, no problem.
And ladies and gentlemen, thanks so much for joining us here on The Right Time.
We do this four times a week.
Ryan Brumbley, handed everything behind the scenes.
Thank you, sir.
Remember, follow the right time.
Also hit the voicemail line 3-2, 3-3-5-9-6-77-67-s.
and subscribe, like, rate us, review us, give us five stars.
You only give us four stars.
I'm inclined to believe you are a hater.
And we'll talk to you guys in a couple of days.
Take it easy.
