The David Schwimmer drama will not be returning for a second season after being picked up straight to series.

It's one-and-done for AMC's Feed the Beast.

The cable network has opted to cancel the drama after one season, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

"We have great respect and admiration for the entire team associated with Feed the Beast, starting with [showrunner] Clyde Phillips, [stars] David Schwimmer, Jim Sturgess and our studio partner, Lionsgate. We are thankful for the opportunity to collaborate with them and appreciative of their talents, dedication and care. Unfortunately, the show simply didn’t achieve the results needed to move forward with a second season," AMC said in a statement.

Schwimmer ) and Dion ( Sturgess ), close friends who open up a restaurant but naturally run into trouble. The series opened to poor reviews ( THR chief TV critic Tim Goodman said to " The drama, picked up straight to series last year, revolved around Tommy () and Dion (), close friends who open up a restaurant but naturally run into trouble. The series opened to poor reviews (chief TV critic Tim Goodman said to " send it back to the kitchen ") and dismal ratings. The drama drew 976,000 same-day viewers and a 0.3 among adults 18-49 — half of its Preacher lead-in. (Comic book adaptation Preacher was subsequently renewed). The move to Tuesdays post-premiere didn't help, with the now-series finale drawing a 0.1 rating among adults under 50.

Based on the Danish series Bankerot , created by Kim Fupz Aakeson and produced by DR Broadcasting, Feed the Beast hailed from Lionsgate TV, where Dexter and Nurse Jackie alum Phillips has an overall deal, and AMC Studios. Phillips executive produced alongside original Bankerot producers Henrik Ruben Genz and Malene Blenkov , as well as Piv Bernth (The Killing). The series marked the latest Danish adaptation at AMC, following its remake of Forbrydelsen , which became The Killing and ran for three seasons on the cabler before closing out at Netflix.