It’s not surprising that everybody’s trying to distance themselves from Diddy these days. The disgraced rapper and producer (formerly known as Puff Daddy, and P. Diddy, whose real name is Sean Combs) ...
“Mo Money Mo Problems” was a song in that vein: it sounds as if Puff Daddy produced it so that audiences ... Listen to the complete top ten from the summer of 1997 on Spotify.
On the rare occasion that a rock and roll act climbed to the top of the charts during the ... in the mid-‘90s when Tupac, ...
Although more than 1,100 songs have reached the coveted No. 1 ... "I'll Be Missing You" by Puff Daddy & Faith Evans, featuring 112 "I'll Be Missing You" debuted at No. 1 on the chart dated June ...
Puff Daddy is now considered a real bad boy but his keenness in sampling brought the early 1980's Club culture to Hip Hop & Pop culture. Listen and learn to the original songs from the 12 ...
Hip hop star Sean 'Puff Daddy' Combs was seen firing one shot toward the ceiling of a crowded New York nightclub in December 1999 during a dispute, a court has heard during the rapper's trial on ...
In 1997, he spent 26 weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 charts, the most of any artist that year. Songs released under his rap moniker Puff Daddy got similarly comfortable on the charts ...
Selling in excess of 10 million, the success of the LP culminated in sell-out stadium shows after also enjoying the top ... song's overall tone. The song received a new lease of life when Puff ...
Diddy, who formerly went by Puff Daddy, has long been known for his over-the-top celebrations ... After the duo traded barbs on social media and in songs for years, their feud escalated after ...
Diddy's accusations have piled up with alleged s*xual misconduct against minors joining the list. Older South Park episode ...
Sean Diddy Combs' first brush with infamy came decades ago at an event where 9 people were killed. Some were his friends, and many say he was to blame.
But Sean Combs has accumulated them like no one else. Since his early days in the 1990s, the New Yorker has gone by the names Puff Daddy, Puffy, Diddy and P. Diddy. This is a reference to the ...