Aubrey O'Day's Shocking Claims About Diddy In Docuseries Leave The Internet Reeling: 'This Broke Me'
By Favour Adegoke on December 3, 2025 at 10:00 PM EST

In the new Sean "Diddy" Combs docuseries, Aubrey O'Day made shocking revelations about the rapper, alleging that her firing was linked to refusing his advances.
The singer also addressed a civil case in which she may have been assaulted, but claims to have no memory of the incident.
The series includes jurors' perspectives on Sean "Diddy" Combs' trial, former employees' accounts, and unseen footage of the disgraced music mogul days before his 2024 arrest.
Aubrey O'Day Alleges Sexual Misconduct By Diddy In Netflix Docuseries

In the new Netflix docuseries "Sean Combs: The Reckoning," former Danity Kane member Aubrey O'Day delivers one of the most striking revelations.
She alleged that during the filming of MTV's "Making the Band," Diddy sent her sexually explicit emails, including photos of himself.
Reading from one of the purported messages, O'Day recalled: "I don't wanna just f-ck you. I can see you being with some motherf-cker that you tell what to do. I make my woman do what I tell her to do, and she loves it."
She then noted that the emails came from her boss, and that her eventual firing six months later was a direct consequence of refusing to participate sexually.
The "Show Stopper" singer also addressed a troubling civil case affidavit in which a woman described walking in on a naked, "very inebriated" O'Day allegedly being assaulted by Diddy and another man.
She admitted she has no memory of the incident and is unsure if it constitutes sexual assault.
"Does this mean I was raped? Is that what this means? I don't even know if I was raped," she said. "And I don't want to know."
The Singer's Claims About Her Former Boss Left The Internet Reeling

Since the release of the Diddy docuseries, people have flooded the internet in shock over the embattled rapper's sordid past and secrets.
Reacting to O'Day's claims on X (formerly Twitter), a person said, "For almost a decade I've watched Aubrey explain consistently how she do NOT f-ck [with] Diddy, and I always thought it was because he chose Dawn over her for Dirty Mone,y but to hear what REALLY happened and how she copes with it, my lord."
Another noted, "Diddy really tried to paint @AubreyODay as the wild, don't wanna follow the rules party girl, but in reality, was mad she didn't wanna be his party girl. Danity Kane could've had a crazy run if he didn't start the bs. #TheReckoning."
A third person commented, "Aubrey O'Day in the new Diddy documentary broke me."
Jurors Reveal Mixed Signals, And Their Take On The Rapper's Assault Case In The Docuseries

The docuseries also includes insights from two jurors who served on Diddy's trial. Juror 160, a woman who grew up listening to his music but was not a fan, reacted to surveillance footage showing Diddy physically assaulting singer Cassandra "Cassie" Ventura.
"It's unforgivable, honestly, you can't beat that small girl like that the way he did. You can say he was a terrible person, but domestic violence wasn't one of the charges," she said.
Juror 75, a man unfamiliar with Diddy before the trial, said he found Cassie and Diddy's relationship confusing, citing their affectionate post-assault text exchanges.
"That was a very, very interesting relationship. There is [sic] two people in love they are overly in love. You cannot explain. She wanted to be with him. He took her for granted. He never thought that she would leave him," he noted, per The Guardian. "So it's like both hands clapping together. You cannot clap with one hand. Both hands, then you get the noise."
He pointed to text messages exchanged between Cassie and Diddy immediately after the assault, highlighting the conflicting signals.
According to Juror 75, the way in which the pair got back together, exchanging text messages like "nothing ever happened," made it difficult to comprehend their relationship.
Asked whether justice had been served, Juror 75 stated confidently, "100%. We saw both sides of it and we came with our conclusions."
Unseen Footage Shows Diddy Days Before 2024 Arrest
The docuseries also unveils previously unseen footage of Diddy captured in the six days leading up to his September 2024 arrest, as federal investigators closed in.
The footage, recorded by a videographer at Diddy's direction, was obtained by the filmmakers after his arrest.
The series opens with scenes of Diddy in a New York hotel room, speaking on the phone with his lawyer and discussing the growing public scrutiny on social media.
"We have to find somebody that will work with us, that has dealt in the dirtiest of dirty business of media and propaganda," Diddy said. "We're losing."
Just days later, Diddy was taken into custody and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy, and transportation to engage in prostitution. He is currently serving a 50-month sentence at Fort Dix in New Jersey.
50 Cent's Netflix Docuseries Faces Backlash As Diddy's Spokesperson Calls It 'Biased'

The controversial series, produced by Diddy's longtime rival Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, arrives months after Diddy was convicted on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, though he was acquitted of the more serious sex-trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges.
The series features interviews with former employees, artists, jurors from Diddy's federal trial, and individuals who have filed civil lawsuits against him.
However, Diddy's spokesperson, Juda Engelmayer, dismissed the documentary as biased.
"Many of the people featured have longstanding personal grievances, financial motives, or credibility issues that have been documented for years," he said, per The Guardian. "The project was built around a one-sided narrative led by a publicly admitted adversary, and it repeats allegations without context, evidence, or verification."
Engelmayer added, "Sean Combs will continue to address legitimate matters through the legal process, not through a biased Netflix production."