Stormy Daniels' lawyer Michael Avenatti charged Sunday that Rudy Giuliani's television appearances have been an 'absolute unmitigated disaster' for the president in a withering rebuke of Donald Trump's personal attorney.

In an interview on 'This Week,' Avenatti said that Giuliani's performance on the program just before him was an 'absolute train wreck' and one of the 'worst TV appearances' by an attorney acting on behalf of a client that he may have ever seen.

'I mean this guy’s all over the map over the last 72 hours on some very simple facts that should be very straightforward,' Avenatti said. 'They don’t know what to say because they’ve lost track of the truth.'

Daniels' attorney asserted, 'It is time for Rudy Giuliani to be put out to pasture.'

PUT HIM OUT TO PASTURE!: Stormy Daniels' lawyer Michael Avenatti charged Sunday that Rudy Giuliani's television appearances have been an 'absolute unmitigated disaster' for the president in a withering rebuke of Donald Trump's personal attorney

Daniels, an adult film actress who says she had an affair with the president, was a guest on Saturday Night Live. She said that what she really wants is for the president to resign

WHAT'S THAT?: The president indicated Saturday that he couldn't hear reporters' questions over the roar of Marine One as he returned to the White House from an Ohio trip. He did not stop to chat with them about the Daniels hush-money payment

Giuliani claimed he's 'not really involved' in the Daniels case, despite making multiple television appearances to talk about it, and that he doesn't know and doesn't care when Trump first learned that Daniels wanted money to keep quiet about an affair she claims they had.

The former New York City mayor was the person who made the bombshell claim that Trump reimbursed his former attorney, Michael Cohen, the $130,000 that Daniels received as a payoff.

He said Sunday that he's still working out the facts of when exactly Trump knew what the $35,000-a-month retained he was paying Michael Cohen was funding after claiming days ago that it was sometime in April.

'It could have been recently, it could have been a while back. Those are the facts that we’re still working on,' Giuliani said. 'And that -- you know, may be in a little bit of dispute. This is more rumor than it is anything else.'

The facts of the matter are under dispute in no small part because of Giuliani's claims last week about what Trump knew and when he knew it.

'I don't think the president realized he paid him back for that specific thing until we made him aware of the paperwork,' Giuliani said Thursday.

He told NBC News that Trump responded, 'Oh my goodness, I guess that's what it was for.'

Trump personally distanced himself from his lawyer's statements on Friday, claiming that Giuliani had only just come aboard and was operating without all of the relevant information.

'When Rudy made the statement — Rudy is great — but Rudy had just started, and he wasn’t totally familiar with every — you know, with everything,' Trump said. 'And Rudy — we love Rudy, he’s a special guy.'

Hours later, Giuliani released a statement that admitting that he had made incorrect statements.

'My references to timing were not describing my understanding of the President's knowledge, but instead, my understanding of these matters,' he offered.

Giuliani also said his suggestion that Cohen paid off Daniels to boost Trump's election odds was wrong.

'There is no campaign violation,' he said. 'The payment was made to resolve a personal and false allegation in order to protect the President's family. It would have been done in any event, whether he was a candidate or not.'

Legal experts roundly rebuked Giuliani on Sunday for the bumbling performance.

'I think this was a very bad week for the Trump team,' Alan Dershowitz, an advocate for the president, said. 'The Trump team has to speak with a single narrative. They have to get their story clearly set out. It has to be put in writing. It shouldn't be put on television shows off the cuff.

Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a former U.S. attorney, likewise told CNN that Giuliani said things last week that were 'deeply hurtful of the president's case' that he did not obstruct justice when he fired former FBI Director James Comey, as well as other matters.

President Donald Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani insists his client ‘says he still loves me’ even though the former New York City mayor may have put him in legal jeopardy during a television interview this week. Giuliani appeared on Jeanine Pirro's Fox News show on Saturday

Avenatti delivered the fiercest blow in his an interview on ABC News.

'It’s an absolute unmitigated disaster for Rudy Giuliani and the president. It’s a train wreck. I can’t believe that that actually just happened. I mean what we witnessed by Rudy Giuliani may be one of the worst TV appearances by any attorney on behalf of a client in modern times,' the attorney to Stormy Daniels said.

'He now expects the American people to believe that he doesn’t really know the facts, that as to every key question you asked, he hasn’t communicated with the president about it. I mean this guy’s all over the map over the last 72 hours on some very simple facts that should be very straightforward.'

Coming back to the topic later in the interview, Avenatti said 'any attorney that’s worth anything could have a 30-minute meeting or conversation with his client and get to the bottom of this. This is not a complicated matter that takes months or years to get to the bottom of, George. I mean, this is absurd.'

Giuliani had previously blasted Avenatti and his client as 'stick-up artists' looking for a seven-figure payday.

He told 'Fox & Friends' that Avenatti had approached MSNBC with an idea for a legal program starring himself and remarked: 'The TV show he could get is – well, "Ambulance Chaser".'

On Sunday, however, he backed off, telling ABC, 'You know, I’m not really involved in the -- in the Daniels thing.'