A pharmaceutical company accused of racketeering made an in-house rap video that featured A$AP Rocky beats and a rhyming bottle of highly addictive narcotics spray.

The jury in the Boston federal court trial of Insys founder John Kapoor viewed the five-minute video featuring company executive Alec Burlakoff dressed as a prescription bottle of Subsys on Wednesday.

“You think you’re bad well I’m the baddest / I was created in a lab with the land of the cactus,” Burlakoff, the vice president of marketing, raps over the beat for A$AP Rocky’s “Fu–in’ Problems”

The entire music video, titled “Great by Choice,” highlights the benefits of pushing doctors to prescribe the pain medication.

The chorus of the song praises a “titration,” a process to quickly increase Subsys dosages.

“I love titration. Yeah it’s a not a problem. I got new patients and I got a lot of ‘em,” the rappers sing.

The lyrics continue, “VIP service like they’ve never seen. Build relationships that are healthy. Got more docs than Janelle’s got selfies.”

And Burlakoff’s mascot costume is labeled prominently with the drug’s maximum dosage — 1,600 micrograms.

Some jurors seemed entertained and one juror could be seen nodding her head to the rhythm as the video played, Bloomberg reported.

In the trial, Insys Therapeutics founder Kapoor, 75, and other company execs are accused of bribing doctors across the country to increase their prescriptions of Subsys — a fentanyl spray used for cancer patients and known to have caused one overdose death.

The trial has also featured bombshell testimony that Insys hired an ex-stripper as a sales manager and the woman even gave a doctor a lap dance.

Meanwhile, in Manhattan federal court one of the doctors who was allegedly bribed by Insys took a plea deal for accepting kickbacks to prescribe the powerful painkiller to his patients.

Alexandru Burducea, 41, was one of five doctors charged for accepting bribes totaling over $800,000 from Insys. The doctors were allegedly paid to be “speakers” at hundreds of sham education presentations that often turned into wild drug- and booze-fueled parties.

Burducea, of Little Neck, NY, admitted, “I understood the speaker fees that were being paid to me were to induce me to prescribe Subsys.”

But he said, “I only prescribed Subsys to patients I believed would benefit from it.”

Burducea pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and faces up to five years in prison at his May 22 sentencing though he is likely to get less time under federal sentencing guidelines.

“The corrupting influence of money has no place in medicine, especially when it comes to prescribing fentanyl and other dangerous opioids,” Manhattan US Attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement. “Like many other doctors around the country, Dr. Burducea is now being held to account for his participation in this corrupt kickback scheme.”