If pettiness was a currency, Curtis Jackson would be the Federal Reserve.
While most brands are spending $8 million for 30 seconds of airtime to make you cry about Clydesdales or nostalgic car rides, DoorDash just let 50 Cent do what he does best: monetize his enemies. In a new campaign released Thursday ahead of Super Bowl LX, the rapper-turned-mogul officially graduated from "Internet Troll" to "Corporate Troll," and the result is a masterclass in disrespect.
The spot, titled "The Big Beef," is technically about getting food delivered. But let's be real — this is a diss track with a corporate budget. And yes, he absolutely went there with the prison sentence.
While most brands are spending $8 million for 30 seconds of airtime to make you cry about Clydesdales or nostalgic car rides, DoorDash just let 50 Cent do what he does best: monetize his enemies. In a new campaign released Thursday ahead of Super Bowl LX, the rapper-turned-mogul officially graduated from "Internet Troll" to "Corporate Troll," and the result is a masterclass in disrespect.
The spot, titled "The Big Beef," is technically about getting food delivered. But let's be real — this is a diss track with a corporate budget. And yes, he absolutely went there with the prison sentence.
The Art of the "Big Beef"
The commercial opens with 50 Cent sitting on a leather couch—bottle of his own Branson Cognac visibly placed on the table, because of course it is—addressing the elephant in the room with the smirk of a man who knows he’s untouchable."It's come to my attention that everyone's calling me a troll," he says. "Some have said even the 'King of Trolls.' First of all, I'm flattered. But I'm done with all that."
He then claims he would never "literally deliver beef when millions of people are watching," before the screen cuts to a title card that simply reads: "50 Cent Would."
From there, it’s open season. As he unpacks a DoorDash bag, he offers a tutorial on how to handle "beef," noting that it is "more of an art than science." And this is where the references start flying over the heads of casual viewers and landing directly on the chin of Sean "Diddy" Combs.
The Breakdown: How 50 Cent Dissected Diddy
If you blinked, you missed the daggers. Here is how 50 Cent turned a grocery run into a breakdown of his rival:- The "Puffs" Gag: While explaining that "you don't want to be too obvious," 50 pulls out a bag of Cheese Puffs. He holds them up just long enough for the "Puff" reference to register, stares at the camera, and deadpans the line about subtlety.
- The "Combs" Disrespect: The most blatant moment comes when he reaches back into the bag and pulls out a multipack of hair combs. "Oh, they sell combs," he says, examining the package with mock surprise. "What a coincidence." He then tosses them over his shoulder like trash.
- The "Branson/50 Months" Synergy: This is the killshot. 50 pulls out a bottle of his own Branson Cognac, noting that it pairs perfectly with beef. He then delivers the line that made the timeline freeze: "Aged 4 years... or 50 months, who's counting?"
The Context (For Those Who Missed It)
This is a triple-layered joke. First, he's plugging his liquor (Branson VSOP is aged 4 years). Second, he's referencing the passage of time.Third, and most ruthlessly, he is mocking Diddy’s specific prison sentence. For those who haven't checked the Bureau of Prisons roster, Diddy was sentenced to exactly 50 months in prison last October. 50 Cent isn't just throwing out a random number; he is using his own product's specs to mock his rival's incarceration.
Why It Works
In an era where Super Bowl commercials try too hard to be "viral," this one succeeds because it feels authentic to who 50 Cent is. He isn't acting; he's just being the same guy who executive produced Sean Combs: The Reckoning.
Most importantly, he’s multitasking. In 40 seconds, he sold you a DoorDash discount, promoted his own cognac, and danced on his enemy's legal grave.
Authentic is one word for it. Ruthless is another. Either way, 50 Cent just proved that while other rappers release diss tracks, he releases business ventures.
Most importantly, he’s multitasking. In 40 seconds, he sold you a DoorDash discount, promoted his own cognac, and danced on his enemy's legal grave.
Authentic is one word for it. Ruthless is another. Either way, 50 Cent just proved that while other rappers release diss tracks, he releases business ventures.



