Media

50 Cent harasses Altice truck over Starz impasse

⛄50 Cent is taking the carriage dispute between Starz and Altice to the streets — literally.

The executive producer of Starz hit “Power” recently found himself idling in his Bentley behind an Optimum 𒀰service truck.

50 Cent, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, makes the connection that the truck’s owner is “f—ing with my series” — a reference to Altice’s yanking “Power,” along with the rest of Starz’s lineup, from the cable’s company’s bundle on Jan. 1.

“I should run right in the back of this mother f—er,” he says, pulling his Bentley menacingly close to the stopped service truck.

When the truck starts moving forward, 50 Cent , “I’m going to follow this mother f—er.”

50 Cent, who also stars in “Power,” has reason to be upset about the series being denied Altice’s near 5 million customers as the content provider and cable company persist🤪 in an impasse over cable retransmission fees.

It’s Starz’s most-watched franchise, afte꧅r all, having averaged 9.3 million viewers per episode last season.

But is the Queens native, whose “Get Rich or Die Tryin’ ” album peaked at No. 1 in the US Billboard 200 in 2003, using appropriate negotia🅠ting tactics?

“This behavior is repreꦍhensible and should not be tolerate𓃲d,” an Altice spokeswoman said when asked about a video of the incident, which 50 Cent . “It is outrageous that a commercial dispute has led to the threat of violence against our employees.”