The ongoing feud between 50 Cent (Curtis Jackson) and the Harris family—T.I. (Clifford Harris), his wife Tiny Harris, and their son King Harris—has escalated dramatically in early 2026, turning from social media jabs into a full-blown media war. At the center of the latest chapter: reports that King Harris, now 21, is desperately pleading with 50 Cent to halt or delete a documentary project that allegedly exposes damaging details about the Harris family. What began as playful trolling has morphed into something far uglier, raising questions about boundaries in hip-hop beefs, family involvement, and the power of documentary storytelling as a weapon.

The roots trace back to late February 2026, when 50 Cent reignited tensions with T.I. by labeling him a “snitch” and posting unflattering images of Tiny Harris on Instagram. This prompted a barrage of responses from the Harris side, including multiple diss tracks from T.I. and King. King, in particular, went nuclear in a video rant, mocking 50 Cent’s late mother, Sabrina Jackson—who passed away from a drug overdose in 1988—telling him to “dig her up” and post a picture, while calling his own mother a “legend” and 50’s a derogatory term. This crossed a line many in hip-hop consider sacred: involving deceased family members.

The backlash was swift. King later apologized to 50 Cent’s son, Marquise Jackson, via outreach, framing his comments as emotional and offering to talk man-to-man. But the damage was done. In retaliation—or escalation—50 Cent teased a documentary project, briefly posting (then deleting) references to “Surviving T.I. and Tiny,” drawing parallels to his prior work on the Diddy allegations documentary. He hinted at covering “20 assault cases” and suggested the Harrises might need crisis PR. Rumors swirled that it would delve into longstanding allegations against T.I. and Tiny, including past claims of drugging and assault (many of which were dismissed or settled without conviction).

By early March 2026, whispers grew that 50 Cent was actively developing or even leaking footage from this project—potentially titled something like “Surviving T.I. and Tiny.” YouTube channels and social media exploded with titles claiming King Harris “begs” 50 Cent to “take down,” “delete,” or “stop” the documentary after supposedly watching previews or leaks. Some videos allege King “broke down” emotionally, realizing the content could “destroy” the family’s image. Others claim T.I. himself pleaded for King to be removed from the focus, highlighting generational fallout.

Adding fuel, King doubled down by launching a cannabis strain called “Ms. Jack Pack,” featuring imagery tied to 50 Cent’s late mother on the packaging—a move framed by some as petty revenge for the Tiny photo posts. King responded to criticism by saying “I call it even,” pointing to 50 Cent’s disses in the Power: Origins theme song and ongoing trolling. This only intensified calls for the documentary’s release, with fans and commentators viewing it as 50 Cent’s signature “media manipulation” play.

As of mid-March 2026, no official full documentary has dropped from 50 Cent’s platforms (like his G-Unit Film & Television or streaming deals), but leaks, episodes, or related content surfaced in viral clips. Some reports mention “Episode 1” drops devastating “truths,” while others focus on King’s regret. The narrative paints 50 Cent as the calculated victor: a mogul who turns personal slights into profitable, image-shattering content. King, once bold in diss tracks and rants, now appears humbled—or humiliated—by the prospect of family secrets exposed globally.

This saga underscores hip-hop’s evolution in the digital age. Beefs once settled via bars or Verzuz battles now leverage documentaries, social media archives, and business empires. 50 Cent has mastered this, using past successes (like the Diddy series) to amplify threats. For the Harrises, it risks turning private allegations into public spectacle, damaging legacies built on music, reality TV (T.I. & Tiny: The Family Hustle), and entrepreneurship.

Critics argue King underestimated 50 Cent’s reach and pettiness. Dragging a deceased parent invited a disproportionate response, turning a generational clash into a cautionary tale. Supporters of the Harrises see it as bullying, while 50 Cent fans celebrate his “long game” mastery.

Whether the documentary fully releases remains unclear—rumors persist, but 50 Cent’s style often involves teasing for maximum impact without immediate delivery. King’s alleged pleas, if true, mark a humbling reversal: from aggressor to the one begging for mercy.

In hip-hop, respect is currency, and disrespect—especially involving family—carries heavy costs. This feud proves that in 2026, the most dangerous weapon isn’t a diss track; it’s a camera, a platform, and a grudge that refuses to die.