"Made In Staten Island," the long-awaited MTV show based on a group of young adults from Staten Island, premiered Jan. 14, 2019. (Courtesy of MTV)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- The cast of MTV's "Made in Staten Island" is apparently sticking together through rumors of cancellations.

After its second week without scheduled programming, viewers of the borough-based series assumed the show had been taken off the air for good. Cast members Dennie Augustine and Christian Patterson took to social media to say otherwise.

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"Everybody just stay in tune with MTV," Patterson tweeted after "Made in Staten Island" was taken out of its Monday night time slot the first time. "The show didn't get taken off, we got something in store."

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We know y’all miss #MadeinStatenIsland !! Stay tuned in boo boo’s! y’all are real af we love the HENNIES 😈💕 pic.twitter.com/B4t7n7FixC — dennieaugustine (@dennieaugustine) February 12, 2019

"There is nothing to worry about."

Echoing Patterson's tweet from the previous week, Augustine posted a short update on the show to her Twitter followers.

"We know y’all miss #MadeInStatenIsland," Augustine wrote. "Stay tuned in boo boo’s!"

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MTV's promotions for "Made In Staten Island," the long-awaited MTV show based on a group of young adults from Staten Island, included this photo. (Courtesy of MTV)

While the show is not actively airing, the cast continues to hold interviews with press and promotional shoots for "Made in Staten Island." On Tuesday, Executive Producer Karen Gravano hosted a "Made in Staten Island"-themed cooking class at Viacom's office in Manhattan.

Members of the cast were taped making pizza pies on Gravano's Instagram story in a class dubbed "Mob Pies." Gravano's daughter, Karina Seabrook, and Dennie Augustine also shared footage on their Instagram stories.

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Members of the MTV's "Made in Staten Island" are shown delivering pizza and supplies to Councilman Joe Borelli's office in the South Shore Commons in Charleston on Jan. 14, 2019. (Staten Island Advance/ Victoria Priola)

Since it's conception, the series has been a controversial topic among locals, as residents feel it caters to the "mob mentality" of Staten Island.

A petition to get the reality TV series off the air started before the first episode premiered and racked up more than 9,000 signatures.

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