Warner Bros., the studio behind the making of The Dukes of Hazzard became the latest corporation to eschew selling products featuring the Confederate flag Tuesday.

Warner Bros. Consumer Products will no longer license die-cast replicas and vehicles model kits based off the TV show that feature the Confederate flag, a spokesman told Vulture.

“We have elected to cease the licensing of these product categories," the spokesman said.

See also: Walmart to stop selling Confederate flag merchandise

Warner Bros. has licensed images on the Dukes brothers' iconic General Lee car on a wide range of products, from t-shirts to iPhone screens to toy cars, for years.

The decision comes a day after South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley announced a push to remove the Confederate flag from the state's capitol grounds.

Walmart, Amazon, Ebay and Etsy also announced Tuesday that they will ban sales of all Confederate flags and flag-related merchandise.

This isn't the first time the Dukes of Hazzard car models have been swept up in Confederate flag controversy. In 2012, reports circulated that the flag would be removed from certain toy versions of the car, upsetting Dukes of Hazzard star Ben Jones.

Jones subsequently released a disapproving letter to the press.

“More than 33 years since the show premiered on CBS-TV on Friday nights, Warner Bros. has issued a new and terribly insulting attack on the South, a region and a culture which Hollywood has trashed for decades," Jones wrote.

At the time, Warner Bros. told the New York Times that General Lee's car would not lose the Confederate flag from its roof.

But it is slated to now, at least in its toy form.

The Confederate flag can still be seen, however, on the top of the Dukes of Hazzard car on show re-runs, which regularly air on CMT. The show is also sold on streaming sites.