Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, the 50-year-old rap mogul whose $520 million empire was built on the grit of Get Rich or Die Tryin’ and the swagger of G-Unit, has been publicly rebuffed in his latest attempt to mend fences with eldest son Marquise Jackson, 29, after gifting him a classic 1969 Chevrolet Camaro SS—a $80,000 nod to their shared love of cars—only for Marquise to reject it outright, declaring, “It’s too late to be a father,” in a raw Instagram video that has laid bare the enduring scars of their fractured bond and reignited debates about celebrity parenting in hip-hop’s high-stakes world.

The gesture, announced by 50 on November 10, 2025, via Instagram, was meant as olive branch: “Marquise, this Camaro’s for you—let’s talk, son.” The car, restored to showroom shine with a 396 V8 engine and custom G-Unit rims, symbolized the father-son car talks from Marquise’s youth. But Marquise, a fitness influencer and entrepreneur with 500k followers, fired back in a 2-minute clip viewed 4.2 million times: “A car? Now? It’s too late to be a father. You missed birthdays, games, everything.” The video, raw with years of resentment, has sparked 3.1 million #50VsMarquise posts, dividing fans between “Fif’s trying” and “Marquise’s right—actions over assets.”
Their rift traces to 2005, when 50’s rise exploded amid custody battles with Marquise’s mother Shaniqua Tompkins. Accusations of neglect flew—Tompkins claimed 50 prioritized career over co-parenting, while he countered with child support payments topping $80k annually. A 2012 leaked text war saw 50 call Marquise a “pawn,” escalating to 2023’s public feud where Marquise accused his father of “buying love” after 50’s $100k watch gift. “Money doesn’t fix absence,” Marquise posted then, 1.8 million likes.
50, father to seven including daughters with exes, has championed reconciliation: “I was young, focused—mistakes made,” he told The Breakfast Club in 2024. Marquise, raised in Queens without 50’s daily presence, built his brand on fitness and fatherhood to his own son, Milan, 10. “I know what a dad should be—because I didn’t have one,” he said.
The Camaro rejection isn’t spite—it’s statement. “A car can’t buy back time,” Marquise captioned. Fans rally: “Marquise speaking for every kid with absent parents.” 50 responded: “Proud of the man you are—door’s open when ready.”
This saga underscores hip-hop’s paternal paradoxes: from Jay-Z’s reconciliation with Blue Ivy to Diddy’s custody wars. As 50’s Power empire expands, Marquise’s stand reminds: Legacy isn’t in lyrics—it’s in presence. The rift endures, but in pain, perhaps, healing begins.