Fifty is stepping into the world of true crime with his upcoming Fox Nation series 50 Ways to Catch a Killer.

The six-episode show, set to premiere September 16, will take viewers inside real-life murder investigations, spotlighting the detectives who unravelled each case.

The project is a collaboration between G-Unit Film & Television and Lionsgate Alternative Television, with 50 Cent serving as both host and producer. “True crime is powerful because it’s real cases, real people, and real justice”, he said in a statement. “We’re bringing these stories to life in a way that’s both gripping and authentic”.

The series teaser opens with the rapper suited up before diving into the chilling case of Mike Williams, a Florida man who went missing in 2000 and whose body was not discovered until nearly 20 years later.

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
Read More

No fireworks. No screaming crowds. Just The Boss, a mic, and a heartbreak so real it made people look away. When Bruce sang “I wish I were blind, when I see you with him”, it didn’t feel like lyrics—it felt like a confession. One fan said, “It’s like watching a man rip open his chest in front of millions.” The unplugged version hits harder than anything on the radio. If you’ve ever loved and lost, this is the performance you’ll never forget.

Bruce Springsteen – “I Wish I Were Blind” (MTV Plugged): A Soul-Baring Cry Lit by Shadows and Spotlight…
Read More

“We still don’t know how to say goodbye…” That was the only sentence Adele managed to say before her voice cracked — and the church fell into silence. At Diogo Jota’s funeral, surrounded by sobs and flickering candlelight, Adele and Ed Sheeran stepped forward — not as superstars, but as two voices carrying the weight of a family’s final request. Jota’s wife had asked for just one thing: “Sing him home.” And that’s exactly what they did. Ed’s guitar echoed like a heartbeat through the cathedral, and Adele’s trembling voice wrapped itself around every corner of the room. Each note was a goodbye, each lyric a wound reopened. People wept. Some prayed. Others simply held each other and broke. But the most haunting moment came when Adele, her voice barely a whisper, approached the coffin, placed a hand gently on the wood… and whispered something no one else heard. She never repeated it. She never looked back. She just walked away, wiping her tears. And in that moment, the music didn’t just end — it stayed…..

The service was private, attended by family, teammates, and close friends. The world had learned only days before…