TBS announced on Tuesday that there will not be a second season of CeeLo Green's unscripted series The Good Life.
Though the former Voice coach is dealing with controversy and the women's rights group UltraViolet sought for the network to cancel the series, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter the cancellation was due to the poor ratings.
The Good Life averaged only 677,000 viewers per episode, even with delayed viewing numbers included. The majority of viewers, 403,000, were in the advertiser important 18-49 demographic, though.
Green pleaded no contest late last week to furnishing a controlled substance. The charge related to an incident where he allegedly slipped a woman ecstasy before heading back to her hotel room with her.
He escaped rape charges due to a lack of evidence and the no contest plea is special because it allows him to maintain innocence and cannot be used against him in civil trial. He received three years probation and must do 45 days of community service.
That should have been the end of the story, but the Grammy winner then decided to head to Twitter to rant about rape, which now has some wondering quite a bit about him.
In a series of tweets since deleted as he took down his Twitter account, he tried to convince his followers that "If someone is passed out they're not even with you consciously. People who have really been raped REMEMBER!!!"
Green followed that eloquent tweet up with an even worse one. "So if I TRIED but did NOT succeed but the person said I DID then what really happened?"
Then after calming down, he released the common non-apology and explained the tweets were being "taken so far out of context."
image courtesy of INFphoto.com