So, Cam'ron Just Won the Petty Wars by Casting Omar Gooding in a Movie That Doesn't Exist

Alright, let's break this down. Some celebrity beefs are just a few spicy tweets and a deleted Instagram story. This... is not that. The feud between Cam’ron and Omar Gooding just went from a war of words to a level of petty that's honestly kind of iconic.

In what might be the finest petty clap back of the year. Killa Cam just revealed he orchestrated and paid for a whole fake movie just to prank Omar Gooding. Yes, you read that right.

In a recent Instagram video, Cam laid out the master plan. After a back-and-forth of diss tracks, he decided to escalate things. "He did another record," Cam explained, referring to Gooding's musical jabs. So, he concocted a scheme, hiring Gooding for a bogus film shoot in Miami a few weeks ago. The price tag for this legendary antic? A cool $3,500.

"That movie never coming out," Cam said, grinning. "I booked you. And I was laughing at you behind the scenes. I was there. I was sitting there laughing at you." The audacity is truly next-level.

So, how did we even get here? Let’s rewind. The whole thing kicked off back in December on Cam'ron's podcast, It Is What It Is. The rapper referred to the actor as "Omar Gooding Jr." (he's not a Jr.) and suggested his career needed a boost from someone like 50 Cent to get back on track.

Gooding, understandably, wasn't feeling the vibe and caught the stray. He clapped back with a diss track, spitting lines like, "He probably didn’t mean it like he said it, but he said it so f**k that dude... They like to booboo and don’t think it stink and then they favorite color’s pink / But probably call it salmon.”

The two also traded shots online, with Cam calling Gooding a "Nickelodeon kid" and Gooding daring the Harlem rapper to "get in the booth."

While Cam admitted Gooding's diss tracks were "actually pretty good," he still chose the path of cinematic chaos. After diss tracks and IG shade, Cam'ron went full Hollywood producer on him. For less than the price of a new MacBook, he created a masterpiece of pettiness that will forever live in the vault.

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