Papoose – Agent Provocateur (50 Cent Diss) [Video]

Papoose fires another direct shot at 50 Cent on “Agent Provocateur.”

The New York MC keeps the pressure on 50 Cent with “Agent Provocateur,” a new diss record that arrives with a visual and makes it clear he is not interested in softening the tone of this feud. It is Pap’s latest direct shot at 50 after his earlier “Many Men” freestyle.

What gives “Agent Provocateur” some bite is that Papoose does not approach it like a throwaway social-media reaction. The track is built as a proper diss record, leaning on sharp phrasing and direct accusations rather than just headline bait. The song opens by questioning parts of 50 Cent’s long-repeated mythology, where Papoose goes after 50’s post-“Get Rich or Die Tryin’” catalog and personal history.

The bigger context matters here too. This is not an isolated jab. Over the last stretch, 50 Cent has been pulled into multiple rap feuds, and Papoose had already entered that orbit with his “Many Men” freestyle before escalating again with “Agent Provocateur.” Even the broader diss-track tracking now lists the song as part of that ongoing anti-50 wave, alongside Maino’s “Bleed Like Us” and the recent T.I.-adjacent back-and-forth.

The visual helps give the record extra impact because it turns the diss into more than a loose audio upload. Papoose is clearly treating this as a moment, not just a quick bar exercise tossed into the timeline. That matters, because diss records only really stick when the artist sounds invested enough to make them feel like an event. Based on the way the track has been rolled out and covered, “Agent Provocateur” is meant to land exactly that way—as a challenge, a provocation, and a demand for a response.

More than anything, “Agent Provocateur” works because Papoose understands that a diss needs angle and conviction, not just aggression. He is not trying to be coy about the target, and he is not relying on vague subliminals to do the work for him. He is stepping straight into the feud and making sure the record has enough directness to keep his name in the conversation. Whether 50 answers or not, Papoose made this one feel deliberate.

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