featured-image

Sean “Diddy” Combs maintained a successful career for decades before his current downfall. The hip-hop mogul now faces allegations of physical and sexual abuse, sex trafficking, and racketeering. In the early years of his career, though, he believed he was someone to be looked up to.

He shared why he thought white people could make the world better by idolizing him. Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs said people should idolize him In 1999, Diddy was the head of a successful record company and Grammy-winning artist . He held a great deal of power in the music industry, which he attributed to his ability to spread around his influence.



“When you runnin’ a marathon, sometimes you take the lead, sometimes you stay back in the pack and you observe what’s goin’ on,” he told Rolling Stone . “If you always try to run in front the whole time, you gonna lose the marathon. I’m in it for the long run.

I don’t have a problem with runnin’ with the pack. You ain’t gotta shine all the time. You shine all the time, you overshine.

” Still, he wanted to shine a bit. At a music video shoot that year, hundreds of teenagers gathered to see him. They were primarily white, which he saw as a good thing.

Diddy believed that the world would be a better place if white people idolized him in their youth. “I think it’s gonna have a drastic change on the way things are set up, totally,” he said. “You’ll have a lot of white kids with a lot of rhythm.

I think it’s gonna make the worl.

Back to Entertainment Page