‘Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy’: 4 allegations from Peacock documentary

Da Band singer Sara Rivers says she heard Sean Combs make plenty of outrageous threats while working with him on MTVβs βMaking the Band 2.β
βWhen he got angry with one of my band members, he said, βYou make me so mad I want to eat your flesh,ββ Rivers alleges in the new documentary special βDiddy: The Making of a Bad Boy,β out now on Peacock. She also claims Combs once told another band member that it would be easy to hire someone to βsmash the sβ out ofβ them.
Rivers says these outbursts and other behavior by Combs made her want to avoid being alone with him.
βI didnβt want to be around him unless there were cameras,β Rivers says. βHe touched me in a place that he shouldnβt have.β
The documentary is the first time Rivers has spoken out about the alleged incident and is among the new accusations featured in βThe Making of a Bad Boy.β
In a statement to the filmmakers, Combsβ attorney says the disgraced hip-hop mogul βunequivocally denies the baseless allegations being circulated in connection with this documentary. Regarding the legal cases referenced, Mr. Combs will not comment on pending litigation.β
Sara Rivers in βDiddy: The Making of a Bad Boy.β
(Peacock)
The documentary special arrives following Combsβ September arrest on charges including sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. Prior to the indictment, numerous people β including Combsβ former girlfriend Casandra βCassieβ Ventura β accused him of sexually and physically abusing them. Many more allegations have followed. Combs has denied all of the accusations.
In addition to Rivers, βThe Making of a Bad Boyβ features interviews with Combsβ childhood friend, a former bodyguard, attorneys representing Combsβ accusers, journalists and others who were in the artistβs orbit, including singer and outspoken Combs critic Al B. Sure. Here are four other takeaways from the documentary special.
Al B. Sure offers explosive theories about Kim Porterβs death β and his own health troubles
Combs former girlfriend Kim Porter, who died in 2018, is brought up a number of times in βThe Making of a Bad Boy,β with some interview subjects alleging that Combs abused her. The film states that βthere was no evidence that Kim Porter was the victim of domestic violence.β
Sure, also known as Albert Brown III, had a son, Quincy, with Porter before she became involved with Combs. The former music executive is among those who raise suspicions about the circumstances around Porterβs death in βThe Making of a Bad Boy.β
According to Sure, Porter warned him about Combs, advising Sure to stay out of Quincyβs life because of Combsβ alleged possessiveness.
βKimberly said β¦ βDonβt get involved. You will get killed,ββ Sure says, declining to delve into any further details, citing ongoing legal issues. βLetβs just say, you got to listen to Kimberly. Because not only was she trying to save me, she was putting her own life in danger.β The documentary notes that no officials have found any evidence to indicate Porter died of suspicious or unnatural causes. Porter and Combsβ children spoke out about the βmany hurtful and false rumorsβ about their parentsβ relationship in September.
Sure, who had his own near-fatal medical crisis in 2022, also suggested that his own health scare involved foul play.
βI kept a record of every single one of you that was sent to set me up, to assist in the attempted murder of Al B. Sure,β he said.
Al B. Sure in βDiddy: The Making of a Bad Boy.β
(Peacock)
A former Bad Boy Entertainment employee speaks out
The documentary special also includes an audio interview with a former Bad Boy employee who asked to remain anonymous βbecause Sean Combs for over three decades, allegedly, heβs had people hurt.β
βThereβs so much I do know,β claims the former employee, who also provides never-before-seen video from the time heβs spent with Combs. βIβve seen this guy be very, very violent. Heβs just been getting away with it for way, far too long.β
In addition to speaking about Combsβ temperament and accusing him of a propensity for violence, the former Bad Boy staffer sheds some light onto the mogulβs alleged sex parties, saying he was tasked with recruiting girls to attend the events. He also claims that Combs once spent the night with girls that were βfor sure underage.β
The former employee, who says he first met Combs in 2015 or 2016, also alleges that Combs once showed him videos of two men having sex while telling him that βthis is what people do in the industry to get to the top.β
When asked by a producer the kinds of things he was asked to do by Combs, the former employee says it was βa very touchy thing to talk aboutβ and that he didnβt want to comment further.
Diddy accuser details her alleged rape
Appearing without showing her face, a woman identified as Ashley alleges that she was held at knifepoint, gang raped and also raped with a TV remote by Combs and his friends in 2018. In addition to detailing her encounter and suggesting the police failed to properly investigate her claims, Ashley mentions that she has been living in isolation after becoming βincredibly reclusive.β (Ashley Parham filed a federal lawsuit accusing Combs of assault in October. Combs has reportedly denied the claims.)
Combsβ mother allegedly threw sex parties, too
Among Combsβ friends interviewed for the special is Tim Patterson, who lived in Combsβ suburban childhood home when they were younger. Patterson speaks about the difficulty Combs had regarding the absence of his father, who was killed when he was very young, as well as what life was like for them in the home.
According to Patterson, Combsβ mother, Janice, threw parties there, where it wasnβt uncommon to walk in on people engaged in sexual activities. Attendees of these parties included βdrug addicts … lesbians … homosexuals … pimps [and] pushers.β
βPeople that attended the parties were from Harlem, from the streets,β says Patterson. βIt wouldnβt be a thing to mistakenly walk into one of the bedrooms and you got a couple in there butt naked.β