While many celebrities remain silent on the Diddy drama, the former 'Tokyo Toni's Finding Love ASAP!' star publicly comes to the disgraced music mogul's defense.
- September 30, 2024
AceShowbiz - Tokyo Toni has come to Sean "P. Diddy" Combs' defense. While many celebrities remain silent on the Diddy drama, the former "Tokyo Toni's Finding Love ASAP!" star publicly defended the rapper.
Recently, the former reality TV star shared her opinions on 54-year-old music mogul, who was formerly known as Puff Daddy, getting arrested for sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. During a livestream, she bravely said "Free Puffy" several times. She went on to state, "We know what's happening, the real ones. Yeah."
Tokyo reiterated, "Free Puffy. Get them on out of here. Why is everybody mad at Puff?" before bursting into laughter. She explained, "Every celebrity in the world, in the United States, point a finger to a man that they know been did this five, ten, fifteen years ago. What a setup. And they for some reason still can't snatch it."
The mother of model/socialite Blac Chyna further elaborated, "Look, any girl that got 'art' shouldn't have been there. Oh well, shouldn't have been there." She continued, "So nobody saw you leaning? You ain't voluntarily walked they just grabbed you and snatched you and threw you in the back. Same with R. Kelly."
A short clip from the livestream was uploaded on Instagram, prompting social media users to voice their thoughts on Tokyo's remarks. In the comments section, one in particular agreed, "But she telling the truth it's sad to say but it's real." Similarly, another chimed in, "I actually agree respectfully." A third added, "yeah Toni speak that truth. The real ones know."
In contrast, many other users blasted Tokyo for supporting Diddy. One of them stated, "She speaks so bad on her daughter but free puff? Girl seek help! She's a weirdo!" Another suggested, "This mentality is DANGEROUS! Lock her up with him!" A third argued, "I believe he's being framed for something bigger than hip hop."