On Thursday afternoon, Funk Flex said he had proof Pete Rock filed a police report against C.L. Smooth, which he addressed on the show.

“C.L. Smooth is the reason you even exist,” he said. “[…] Those producers always gave the best material to they groups. You, bozo, gave it out as remixes to be spiteful. What happened now in 2022? Guess who’s broke? You wanna sue the people who helped you like Nas and Eddie F. This guy also went to the precinct on C.L. Smooth. His partner that he’s known for 30 years went to the precinct, filed out a report, went on record.

“The police came to arrest C.L. Due to a technicality, they could’n’t arrest him. He did this in the U.K. He did not care if he was put in a jail overseas where the rules are totally different from New York. He went to the precinct, filled out a report and cooperated. What type of guy is that? And you talk to me about the game and integrity? You have none. You have zero. Don’t you ever, you hear me, Bozo?”

Elsewhere in Funk Flex’s diatribe against Pete Rock, he alleged he didn’t write any of his verses. As an example, he brought up Run-DMC’s 1993 smash “Down With The King,” which Rock produced and featured both C.L. Smooth and Rock rapping.

“You produced a ton of songs, a ton of records and ton of good records,” he said. “No. Iconic, great records, including yours and your album. But you know what I found about you, my brother? You didn’t write those verses. Grand Puba wrote all your verses on your album and C.L. Smooth wrote yours on ‘Down With The King.’ That also makes you a fraud, my friend. So you say that you want to upkeep Hip Hop and you are all for Hip Hop and preserving the culture, but you didn’t write your own bars. You, my friend, are a buffoon.

“Best verse of your life and you didn’t even write it. You end up doing a whole lot of remixes, but your friend DJ Eddie F is the one that put you in power. All of those remixes that you got were really for Eddie F, he passed them to you. Now you’re suing them … crazy. Allegedly. That’s what I heard. So you’re suing Nas. He’s suing Eddie F. Eddie F is Heavy D’s DJ from Heavy D and the Boyz. He put that buffoon on and now he’s suing him.”

At the end of the day, Funk Flex believes Pete Rock is angry because he’s struggling financially. He speculated Rock’s production was no longer in high demand once Diddy stepped on the scene in the 1990s.

“So ’90s, right? You hot,” he said. “I’m going to tell you the exact time you were out of business and no longer relevant. This song should explain what happened to your career. This song right here is the reason, you sir, you were finished, no longer mattered and weren’t relevant. [He then played Craig Mack’s 1994 classic “Flava In Ya Ear” produced by Easy Mo Bee and released on Diddy’s Bad Boy Entertainment label.]

“When that song came out? What was that ’93, 94? Somewhere in there, you no longer mattered. Your beats became garbage. And you mad at Puff Daddy ’cause he changed the game, so now you want to attack him, taking his name, taking whatever. You didn’t take nothing. OK, then Bozo?”