Here’s what Sean Combs will be having for Thanksgiving dinner in jail



Sean “Diddy” Combs will be having a much different Thanksgiving in prison.

The music mogul, known for his elaborate parties, will have a different menu than he’s used to Thursday at Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix in New Jersey.

His lunch meal — the most traditional one for the holiday — will consist of his choice of roasted turkey or soy chicken and vegetables, along with side dishes including cornbread and dressing; baked sweet potato; mashed potatoes; corn; chicken gravy; whole wheat bread; and his choice of fruit or a holiday dessert, according to PEOPLE. Beverages will also be provided.

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Breakfast and dinner will be more meager meals, with the former consisting of bananas, bran flakes, whole wheat bread, and skim milk. It will be served with two jelly packets and margarine spread.

For dinner, Combs and his fellow inmates will be served their choice of sandwich: either deli meat and sliced cheese or peanut butter and jelly. They will also be offered a side of either potato chips, fruit, dessert, or whole wheat bread and jelly.

On Christmas Day, inmates will again have a more celebratory meal, but with the option of baked Cornish hen.

Entertainment Weekly has reached out to Combs’ reps for comment.

In October, the Grammy winner was sentenced to more than four years behind bars, following a July conviction on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. However, he was found not guilty of racketeering conspiracy and two counts of sex trafficking, which would have resulted in a much longer sentence.

Sean Combs steps out in Beverly Hills in 2017.

Neilson Barnard/Getty


His lawyer argued that all sex involved in the case was consensual.

Last month, President Donald Trump confirmed that Combs, 56, had requested a pardon from him. However, he has so far declined to grant him one.

On Oct. 21, the White House told USA Today that stories saying Combs was “deliberating a commutation,” and he could be freed as early as that week, were false.

Earlier this week, Combs’s longtime rival Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson announced that his four-part docuseries about his fellow rapper’s downfall, called Sean Combs: The Reckoning, will premiere Dec. 2 on Netflix.


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