No sibling rivalry right here! Diddy‘s son Quincy, 31, says he never fights with his younger brothers Justin, 29, or Christian, 25, as the trio support each other in business, life and beyond. “People act like we supposed to be fighting all the time. We ain’t by no means fought, which is loopy,” Quincy revealed in an interview with Entertainment Tonight‘s Kevin Frazier when promoting the family’s new sequence Family Legacy on Paramount+ alongside the late The Notorious B.I.G. (aka Biggie)’s son CJ Wallace, 26.
Quincy and Christian — often known as King Combs — have each adopted of their dads footsteps with music careers, whereas Justin has opted to deal with performing, as has Biggie’s son CJ. “Each piece of the puzzle is necessary. We don’t overlap,” Quincy, who’s the organic son of Diddy’s ex Kim Porter and Al B. Sure and was adopted by Diddy, defined. Justin — who’s the son of Diddy and designer Misa Hilton-Brim, echoed what his eldest sibling stated, including, “If I see Quincy or Christian and going hard, I gotta go harder. We’re always happy for each other and just want each other to be the best, because it makes us the best.”
The three brothers and shut pal CJ are all showing on the brand new Paramount+ sequence wherein they appear again on the musical and popular culture legacies of their households. “Being able to look back on those things, it feels good to be a part of history, and just be a part of something that was so special,” Justin stated of his dad’s legendary carer, which started again as an intern and expertise director within the early 90s at Uptown Records as Sean Combs. As Puff Daddy, he based Bad Boy Entertainment in 1993 and launched Biggie’s Ready To Die the next 12 months — adopted by his personal extremely profitable profession as a rapper and producer. “I’m just so grateful that I was a part of that and was there to witness these things,” he defined.
1997’s No Way Out cemented Diddy’s standing as a endlessly hip-hop icon, which included Biggie tribute single “I’ll Be Missing You” along with his spouse Faith Evans. The album additionally featured tunes “Been Around The World,” and “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down” — and finally gained the GRAMMY Award for Best Rap Album in 1998.
Justin additionally touched on Biggie’s loss of life and the way it endlessly modified his father. “Just one of the saddest days in his life. [It] changed his life forever,” Justin stated of the homicide, which occurred in 1997. “They were also young, so to deal with something like that at the height of their career… We still deal with it today. No one has really gotten over that. It affects us as well, too, because it was just such a big loss to all of our family.”
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