After yet another woman has stepped forward to claim that Bill Cosby sexually assaulted her, Netflix has decided to shelve their planned special celebrating the seasoned comedian.

Yesterday we reported that NBC might back out of their deal with Bill Cosby, 77, which would bring the actor back on the small screen, and today sees another fallout from the recent sexual assault allegations made against him.

Netflix has announced that it will not be releasing the comedy special, titled Bill Cosby 77, which was scheduled to air November 27, just in time for Thanksgiving.

Update: Multiple outlets reported Wednesday afternoon that NBC has now scrapped their Cosby project as well. The network was planning a new sitcom with Cosby.

On Saturday, the streaming service stated that the special would air as planned, despite the controversy surrounding the actor in the wake of the recently resurfaced sexual assault allegations.

But since then, several more women have stepped forward. Last night, supermodel Janice Dickinson told Entertainment Tonight that she was raped by Cosby in 1982.

This brings the total number of women who have publicly accused Cosby of sexual assault to six, according to Variety.

Since these allegations first began resurfacing, both Netflix and NBC have been under fire to distance themselves from the actor. And now, Netflix has released a statement in which they announce their intention to postpone the special indefinitely.

On Sunday, Cosby’s lawyer released a statement calling the allegations “decade-old” and “discredited,” emphasising that, “the fact they are being repeated does not make them true.”

Cosby was accused of sexual assault and taken to court in 2005, but the matter was settled out of court.

Dickinson claimed in the ET interview that she had originally written about the assault in her 2002 autobiography, but Cosby and her lawyers pressured publisher HarperCollins to remove the details.

Following her interview, Cosby’s lawyer stepped forward to dispute Dickinson’s claims, calling her accusation “a complete lie.”

NBC has yet to make a statement about the future of their Cosby comedy, which is currently in development.