Aubrey O'Day Says Watching Diddy Doc Landed Her In The ER As It Left Her Sick And 'Vomiting All Night'
By Favour Adegoke on December 13, 2025 at 4:30 PM EST

Aubrey O'Day explained that watching the recently released Netflix documentary detailing allegations against Sean "Diddy" Combs triggered a severe physical and emotional reaction.
According to the singer, this landed her in the emergency room and forced her to miss a Danity Kane reunion show.
Aubrey O'Day was close to Sean "Diddy" Combs at the height of his fame, but she alleged that she was kicked off "Making The Band 3" for refusing his sexual advances.
Aubrey O'Day Was Hospitalized After Watching The Diddy Doc

O'Day has opened up about the emotional toll that watching the Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson-produced documentary on Diddy had on her.
The former Danity Kane singer, who participated in the documentary, explained that seeing the film re-traumatized her as it felt like she was reliving her past experience with the embattled rapper.
According to TMZ, O'Day noted that the situation was so bad she was rushed to the emergency room as she experienced a couple of debilitating symptoms, including "vertigo, fever, dizziness, migraine, chills, and vomiting all night."
"Watching everything from Netflix unfold publicly, seeing parts of a world I only knew from inside my own limited lens, was like living it again, but this time with context and truth outside of me," O'Day stated.
She continued, "I didn't think it would traumatize me the way it did, but watching the pieces line up from a distance outside of myself has felt like my nervous system was reliving everything with more clarity than I ever even asked for."
The Singer Had To Sit Out Danity Kane's Reunion Show In L.A. Due To The Documentary

The sudden illness forced O'Day to skip the Los Angeles stop of Danity Kane's reunion tour, leaving fellow members Aundrea Fimbres and D. Woods to perform as a duo.
She expressed heartbreak over comments from social media users telling her she should have developed a thick skin and go ahead with the show.
In her Instagram post explaining the reason for her absence, she said that she tried to "find any way to make this work," but was unsuccessful with it, adding that things were "completely out of my control."
The 41-year-old then shared her hopes of hitting the road again, "the second my body lets me."
"My heart is broken because I never want to let my DK sisters or the fans down ... However, I can't wait to be with my girls for our Connecticut show on the 13th," she said.
O'Day's participation in the documentary included reading aloud a sexually explicit email allegedly sent by Diddy in the late 2000s, and she maintained that she was fired from "Making The Band 3" group because she refused his alleged sexual advances.
What Aubrey O'Day Said About Her Former Boss In The Documentary

During an interview portion of the Netflix docuseries "Sean Combs: The Reckoning," O'Day made some jaw-dropping revelations about her relationship with the embattled rapper.
She said that while filming MTV's "Making the Band," Diddy sent her sexually explicit emails, which included photos of himself.
According to O'Day, one of the messages read: "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 stated that her firing, which occurred six months after the emails were sent, was directly linked to her decision not to sleep with Diddy.
The singer also talked about a civil case linked to Diddy, in which a woman claimed she once walked in on a "very inebriated" O'Day being assaulted by the disgraced music mogul and another man.
This claim left O'Day stunned as she admitted she had no memory of such a moment.
"Does this mean I was raped? Is that what this means? I don't even know if I was raped," she stated. "And I don't want to know."
Diddy's Camp Slams The Netflix Doc

A spokesperson for Diddy has since slammed the documentary as "a shameful hit piece" that "relied on stolen footage," per The BBC.
It contained footage filmed in the days before the "Finna Get Loose" rapper's arrest in September 2024, and one question that has remained on the lips of many netizens is how 50 Cent got them.
The spokesperson said it was "staggering" that the streaming platform handed creative control of the series to the "Candy Shop" rapper, who they described as a "longtime adversary with a personal vendetta."
"Netflix is plainly desperate to sensationalise every minute of Mr Combs's life, without regard for truth, in order to capitalise on a never-ending media frenzy," the statement said.
They continued, "If Netflix cared about truth or about Mr Combs's legal rights, it would not be ripping private footage out of context - including conversations with his lawyers that were never intended for public viewing. No rights in that material were ever transferred to Netflix or any third party."
Netflix Hits Back At The Rapper's Team

Diddy's spokesperson also added that the documentary contains clips that were "never authorised for release," explaining that Diddy had been recording his life since he was 19 "to tell his own story, in his own way."
However, the streaming giant denied any illegalities, adding that the claims that have trailed the release of the documentary from the rapper's camp are "false."
"The project has no ties to any past conversations between Sean Combs and Netflix. The footage of Combs leading up to his indictment and arrest was legally obtained. This is not a hit piece or an act of retribution," Netflix said.
The company added, "Curtis Jackson is an executive producer but does not have creative control. No one was paid to participate."