Justin Combs and Christian “King” Combs, two of the sons of music mogul and hip-hop executive Sean “Diddy” Combs, are preparing to share their own perspective on recent legal and media controversies involving their father in a new documentary series set to premiere on the Zeus Network in 2026.
The yet-to-be-titled docuseries, announced this week via social media and press outlets, will focus on Justin, 31, and Christian, 27, as they reflect on their experiences amid the intense public scrutiny surrounding their father’s federal trial earlier this year and his current incarceration. A teaser trailer released on December 28 depicts the brothers watching news footage and archival clips from Sean Combs’s trial, including scenes of reporters confronting them outside the courthouse and flashes of headlines tied to the case. The preview concludes with Justin receiving a phone call from FCI Fort Dix, where their father is serving a 50-month federal sentence following his conviction on prostitution-related charges.
According to Zeus Network CEO Lemuel Plummer, the project is not intended as a defense or endorsement of Sean Combs, but rather as a platform for Justin and Christian to tell their personal story and lived experiences in their own words. “We’re simply allowing these stories to be told,” Plummer wrote in an Instagram comment addressing early pushback and speculation.
The announcement comes against the backdrop of ongoing media fascination with the Combs family. In early December, a Netflix documentary executive-produced by Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson titled Sean Combs: The Reckoning debuted, chronicling the ups and downs of Sean Combs’s career and the controversy leading up to his arrest. In contrast, the upcoming Zeus docuseries appears poised to offer a more inward, first-person account centered on the emotional and psychological toll the saga has taken on his children.
While details on a specific release date in 2026 remain unclear, the series is already generating attention as a potential counter-narrative to mainstream portrayals of the rapper’s downfall. Beyond revisiting the legal turmoil, sources say the docuseries will touch on themes of family loyalty, identity, media scrutiny, and the personal costs of fame as experienced by Justin and Christian.
As conversations about celebrity accountability and narrative control continue across entertainment landscapes, the Combs brothers’ decision to present their side of the story highlights a growing trend of family-driven storytelling in documentary media — particularly when public figures face intense judgment and complex legacies.
