Rapper and media mogul 50 Cent launched a ruthless online attack against actor Jussie Smollett just hours after Smollettās long-awaited return to the stage at Harlem Pride, igniting a new firestorm over the disgraced starās comeback attempt.
The Grammy-nominated artist, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, shared video clips of Smollettās performance on social media Saturday, mocking the former Empire star and reigniting a years-old feud between their respective television empires.
āI told yāall Power was the better show, but yāall wanted Empire,ā 50 Cent wrote alongside the footage, a direct jab at the Fox š¹šš¶šš¶ that made Smollett a household name before his 2019 hate crime hoax conviction.
Smollett had appeared visibly emotional during the Harlem Pride set, telling the crowd he hadnāt performed in eight years and expressing gratitude for the chance to reconnect with his community.
āIāve just been a little scared. We let all of that go,ā Smollett said from the stage, his voice cracking as he addressed the audience. āIām just so grateful that itās with yāall and itās with family.ā
But 50 Centās swift response undercut what many saw as a vulnerable moment. The rapper turned Smollettās comeback into a punchline, dredging up the old network television rivalry between Power on Starz and Empire on Fox.
The exchange highlights the deep cultural divide that still surrounds Smollett four years after he was convicted of staging a racist and homophobic attack against himself in Chicago.
Smollett reported to police in January 2019 that two men wearing ski masks had beaten him, put a rope around his neck and shouted racist and homophobic slurs. The story sparked national outrage and a massive manhunt.
Within weeks, Chicago police announced they believed Smollett had orchestrated the entire incident. He was charged with disorderly conduct for filing a false police report and later convicted in 2021 on five counts.

The conviction was overturned on appeal in December 2023 after a state appellate court ruled that Smollettās due process rights had been violated when prosecutors secured a special prosecutor after the original charges were dropped.
Smollett has consistently maintained his innocence, telling reporters, āI would not be my motherās son if I was capable of one drop of what Iāve been accused of.ā
Despite the legal reversal, public opinion remains sharply divided. Many still view Smollett as someone who exploited racial and homophobic violence for personal gain.
The Harlem Pride performance was widely seen as a test of whether the entertainment industry and the LGBTQ community are ready to embrace him again.
āBecause of the incident, because of the hoax thing. The self is complicated, but that whole situation was complicated,ā one commentator noted in the video transcript, capturing the ambiguity surrounding Smollettās return.
50 Centās intervention adds another layer of complexity. While the rapperās trolling is signature behavior, it also reflects a broader refusal among many in the entertainment world to let Smollett move on.
The Power star has built a career on provocative social media posts, often targeting celebrities he perceives as weak or hypocritical. But this latest salvo carries extra weight because of the long-simmering Empire vs. Power rivalry.

When Empire debuted in 2015, it became a cultural juggernaut, earning massive ratings and critical acclaim. Power, which premiered a year earlier, also grew into a powerhouse but always lived in Empireās shadow in terms of mainstream buzz.
Now, with Smollett struggling to rebuild his public image, 50 Cent appears to be capitalizing on the opportunity to settle old scores while generating šæš¾šš¶š content.
āHe sees an Empire cast member. He sees an old TV rival. And he sees a perfect chance to get a šæš¾šš¶š joke off,ā the video commentary explained.
The irony is that 50 Cent may have inadvertently amplified Smollettās message. By sharing the performance clip and adding his own commentary, the rapper drove millions of eyes back to Smollettās comeback moment.
Some social media users noted that 50 Centās post actually boosted visibility for an event that might otherwise have remained a small, local Pride celebration.
āDid 50 Cent just expose that people still arenāt ready to forgive Jussie Smollett, or did he accidentally help push his comeback even further?ā the video commentator posed.
The question crystallizes the core tension in Smollettās ongoing saga. Legal victories do not guarantee social redemption. Public memory remains long, and the internet is filled with voices ready to remind audiences of past transgressions.

Smollettās performance itself drew mixed reactions from attendees. Some cheered his return, while others remained skeptical. The complexity of the moment was not lost on observers.
āThis performance was not just about singing. It was about whether people are ready to see Jussie Smollett outside again. Whether the entertainment industry is ready to let him back in,ā the video noted.
For 50 Cent, the calculation is simpler. The rapper knows that any content involving Smollett generates engagement, and he is willing to lean into the controversy for clicks and commentary.
The ongoing debate underscores a larger cultural reckoning about second chances, accountability, and the role of social media in shaping public perception.
Smollettās team has not publicly responded to 50 Centās latest remarks. But the actorās decision to step back onto a stage after years of legal battles reveals a man unwilling to fade from the spotlight.
Whether the public is ready to separate the artist from the ššššš¹š¶š remains uncertain. What is clear is that moments like thisāwhere a Pride performance becomes a battleground for online opinionāwill continue to define the legacy of one of the most controversial figures in recent pop culture history.
As one observer put it, āThis is comeback versus controversy, pride stage versus public opinion, empire versus power, and Jussie trying to rebuild while 50 Cent is making sure the internet never forgets the š¹šš¶šš¶.ā
For now, Smollettās Harlem Pride performance will be remembered not just for the music, but for the digital firestorm that followedāproving that in the age of breaking news, no moment of vulnerability is safe from the sharp edge of a šæš¾šš¶š joke.


