Bad Boy for Life. A six-month investigation by Rolling Stone.
For decades, Sean “Diddy” Combs was hip-hop’s boisterous showman. Now, dozens of former friends, employees, and Bad Boy artists allege an abusive, violent figure behind the facade.
Sources describe Sean “Diddy” Combs as a complicated man with opposing personas.
Outwardly, they see a tastemaker who is unapologetically driven, generous, and jovial. But associates who got close enough to Diddy discovered something darker behind the facade: a menacing figure who desperately wants to be accepted and admired, who uses public declarations of devotion, splashy donations, and boasts that he is “Brother Love” to hide an undercurrent of alleged abuse and violence that — in one previously unreported allegation — traces back to before his career even started.
.@_PesoPluma helped curate the Future 25 list in the #RollingStoneFutureofMusic issue, sharing the rising stars inspiring him right now.
Rolling Stone's Future 25 list drops March 21.
@_PesoPluma .@_PesoPluma is rewriting the rules of música mexicana.
"I’m proud to wave my flag up high and to be the first to do a lot of things — to be able to show my roots and where we’re from and what we like to listen to and what we do."
EXCLUSIVE: Sam Altman’s cronies were deeply involved with Biden challenger Dean Phillips’ longshot campaign before forming a super PAC to support him, according to documents obtained by Rolling Stone.
The “tech bros” leading the Dean Phillips super PAC also have a new dark money group up on the air in New Hampshire. They launched the dark money group the day after leaving the Phillips campaign’s “leadership” Signal chat.
In recent weeks, according to two people familiar with the matter, Donald Trump has privately remarked that several anti-abortion leaders now have no “leverage” to force him to do anything.
Tax records reveal that Fidelity Charitable and other charities have funneled millions through donor-advised fund programs to groups pushing vaccine skepticism and Covid-19 misinformation.
Rolling Stone and Important Context tracked more than $15 million that donor-advised funds gave in 2020-22 to anti-vax or Covid-19 misinformation groups, like RFK Jr.'s Children's Health Defense.