DJ Akademiks has levied allegations of being unethical against Netflix and 50 Cent. The social media personality took to a recent livestream to react to the new Netflix documentary about Diddy, Sean Combs: The Reckoning. The series, which debuts on the platform on Tuesday, December 20, sees 50 Cent as its executive producer, among others. According to DJ Akademiks, however, the streaming platform is simply using the rapper as a promotional tactic to allegedly cover up for sourcing the footage for the documentary wrongfully. "Netflix fibbed on this," he claimed. "I think Netflix wanted this doc and commissioned this doc, but they wanted to be sheisty. I think they picked 50, and they knew that 50 was a good villain to have as the face, because they wanted to do sheisty sh*t." DJ Akademiks claims 50 Cent is in no position to produce a neutral documentary about Diddy: Read more In his recent livestream, DJ Akademiks said of the upcoming documentary: "What you're gonna see, is that there's a trailer of this Diddy documentary, which is supposedly his own footage of days and weeks leading up to his arrest, which his own team was filming." The streamer referenced Diddy's recent claims that the streaming platform sourced the footage "illegaly," remarking that it was done "unethically" instead. "I think that Netflix needed somebody to take that face to take that blame. And who better to take that blame than Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson? And I really think this is Netflix's thing. I don't think 50 went out of his way and found it," DJ Akademiks said. DJ Akademiks also claimed that picking the rapper was also a conflict of interest, as the mother of his son, Daphne Joy, was involved in Diddy's trial earlier this year as one of his alleged victims. He alleged that it was impossible for the rapper to provide "any neutral type of documentary" when Joy was getting intimate with escorts at Diddy's infamous "freak-off" parties. "How could the baby father of the victim be the person to give somewhat of a neutral documentary into the behind-the-scenes or the life of the guy that is accused of vilifying said person?" Diddy, who is currently serving a 50-month sentence on charges relating to federal sex trafficking, transportation to engage in prostitution, and racketeering, has also reacted to the documentary. People Magazine has reported that the now-disgraced rapper dubbed the docuseries a “shameful hit piece.” “Today’s GMA teaser confirms that Netflix relied on stolen footage that was never authorized for release.” Diddy’s team said in a statement. “As Netflix and CEO Ted Sarandos know, Mr Combs has been amassing footage since he was 19 to tell his own story, in his own way. It is fundamentally unfair, and illegal, for Netflix to misappropriate that work,” it further added.The statement continued, “None of this was obtained from Sean Combs or his team, and its inclusion raises very serious questions about how this material was accessed and why Netflix chose to use it.” Moreover, the statement claimed that Diddy’s legal team was in touch with Netflix.As for 50 Cent, he has emphasized that the docuseries has nothing to do with his personal squabbles with the incarcerated mogul. Stay tuned to SoapCentral for more.