50 Cent is making a big push for Fightland, his upcoming ABC series. He posted on X this week to hype the project, and the message was direct.
“This sh!t is so official, I can’t wait for you to see it,” he wrote about the show. “POWER, ABC FOR LIFE, it’s killing all that sh!t.”
The post linked to what appear to be promotional clips for the project.
The Power reference wasn’t incidental. That franchise is 50 Cent‘s most significant work in television. He created and executive-produces the whole universe. It launched on Starz in 2014 and ran six seasons. Four spinoffs followed: Power Book II: Ghost, Power Book III: Raising Kanan, Power Book IV: Force, and Power Book V: Influence. The Power universe became one of Starz’s flagship properties. Dropping that name into a Fightland post signals how seriously he’s taking the new project.
The ABC move is a notable shift. Power and all its spinoffs live on Starz, a pay-cable platform with a subscriber-based audience. ABC is free, over-the-air broadcast television with affiliates across the country. A hit on ABC would put 50 Cent in front of a mainstream television audience. Cable rarely reaches that scale. Broadcast networks don’t pick up shows casually, so the greenlight indicates real confidence from ABC in the project.
Fightland’s details are sparse in public announcements. No premiere date has been set. No cast has been announced. What’s on record is 50 Cent’s own declaration – confident and unsolicited. That fits how he typically promotes his work. He doesn’t wait for the official press cycle. He talks about his projects early.
The combat sports connection makes sense for him. He’s been active in professional boxing as a promoter and manager for years. He also played a boxing coach in Power Book II: Ghost. A project called Fightland isn’t a departure. It lines up with territory he’s already familiar with.
Fan response on X was mostly positive. Replies pointed to the Power franchise as confirmation of his ability to deliver on big claims. The phrase “ABC FOR LIFE” in his post drew attention. Some followers read it as a long-term commitment to the broadcast network, not just a single show.
His television career has expanded steadily. One show on cable grew into a multi-title franchise on Starz. Now he’s taking a new project to a major broadcast network. Fightland hasn’t aired yet. Whether it matches the tone or scale of the Power universe is still unknown.
The television landscape in 2026 is competitive across every platform. A confident social media post doesn’t guarantee performance. But 50 Cent’s track record on Starz is real, and ABC’s backing gives Fightland a credible platform. The premiere will be the first real test.
