Wynne Evans once again found himself at the centre of another Strictly Come Dancing scandal over the weekend.
The opera singer, 53, was recorded crudely suggesting a three-way sex session with It Takes Two presenter and professional dancer Janette Manrara, using the demeaning term 'spit roast' during a photocall to launch the Strictly live tour.
He has now reportedly been dropped from the tour after repeated warnings from the BBC. BBC Studios will be releasing a statement later today, it has been reported.
It comes after a string of other scandals on the show last year - notably his awkward 'hand wandering' moment with Katya Jones.
She had to push his hand away as they stood together on the live show as he wrapped his arm around her waist.
Just two weeks later the Welsh tenor's 'jokes' caused further controversy when he suggested to a make-up artist that the folds of his double chin looked like a vagina.
Despite his tumultous time on the show Wynne was supported by his new girlfriend Liz Brookes during the Strictly stint.
She often supported him in the audience for the live shows and shared a sweet snap with him after the show where he caused controversy with Katya - saying she was 'proud' of him.
So what is going on in Wynne's love life? Here MailOnline takes a look at his romantic history as his X-rated sex jibe scandal rumbles on:
During his Strictly stint last year it was revealed that Wynne had found love again after the breakdown of his 16-year marriage left him contemplating suicide.
The opera singer has been in a relationship with events manager Liz Brookes, 50, since the start of last year.
Wynne previously revealed he hit 'rock bottom' in the midst of his depression, stemming from the end of his marriage to Welsh violinist Tanwen, the mother of his two children, in 2016.
They pair had first met on a British Youth Orchestra course, where Wynne was starring in a production of Robin Crusoe.
After the divorce he was forced to leave the family home he shared with their kids daughter Ismay, and son, Taliesin - moving into a 'sad' derelict house with boarded up windows in Cardiff as that was all he could afford at the time.
He said in a podcast interview last year that he house was in such a bad state when he moved in that the children even had to sleep in tents when they came to visit.
Speaking on The Starting Line podcast with Rich Leigh, he said: 'It was a really sad house because it was derelict, and I moved here after a divorce.
'I didn't want to move here, I wanted to stay married. So I bought it and it just became sad. It was a sad place.'
'It was boarded up because all of the windows had gone. I came to see the house and it was the size I wanted and it's what I could afford.
'I said to the estate agent, 'This is not for me this house, this house is definitely not for me'.
'The house was an absolute tip, the garden was beautiful, I don't know what the guy was doing here before. It was just terrible.'
But Wynne is now in a relationship with fitness fanatic Liz - who is said to have helped him lose weight ahead of Strictly.
A source told The Sun during his Strictly stint: 'Wynne and Liz met at an event and are taking things slow, but he's excited about where the relationship might go.
'He is in a much better place now than when his marriage ended. It's like night and day — and he is so happy.'
Liz, who he shares a love of fitness with, watched him perform on Strictly and shared a picture saying she was 'so proud of this one tonight' after one episode.
Speaking on a podcast, he gushed: 'I go out running with my girlfriend and stuff and I feel much better for it.'
Wynne also revealed that Liz helps him keep up his exercise regime.
Last Christmas, he revealed they were spending some time together. He posted a picture of his dog and wrote: 'Now I'm back home my girl Ginny is home. Just waiting for @liz_brookes and we can watch a Christmas film.'
Before meeting Liz Wynne was struggling with his mental health and battled depression and loneliness for years before opening up about his struggles in a bid to help others.
To mark the start of Mental Health Awareness Week, Wynne told BBC Radio Wales of the split: 'It was almost like grief, but you can't grieve for somebody that's still there.
'So, it really affected my mental health, my confidence and my ego - it totally changed me as a person.'
Wynne continued: 'It made me very aware of being alone. And, even though I was only 46, I had this irrational fear of dying on my own. I had very dark thoughts and very dark days where I would contemplate all sorts of terrible things.
'I think it's obvious what I'm saying, but I don't want to say it because some people find it distressing. I'm fine to talk about it now, but at that time nothing would help me. I realised that I wanted my life to be over and I did some stupid things.'
Wynne shared that, realising he needed help, he booked to see a psychiatrist and began taking medication.
He also said that fresh air and exercise aid him in keeping the depression at bay, but readily acknowledged that this may not work for everyone.
During an appearance on This Morning that April, Wynne said: 'I've always been fat, I thought ''I've gotta do something''.
'I was having trouble washing and getting up the stairs. My mental health hasn't been great in the last five or six years, and it really helped.'
The father-of-two went on to say that he continued working on the radio during the difficult time: 'The strapline of my show is, 'cheering Wales up by one o'clock,' but I was going through the worst depression, clinical depression'.
'I would think about (suicide), I would try and action it... I couldn't see a way out; I couldn't see a way of ever being happy again.
'I realised that I wanted my life to be over and I did some stupid things,' he said.
'Then I went to seek some help with a proper psychiatrist and got on some medication, which for me was a good way of me helping me to help myself.'
In a chat with Mind - the mental health charity - he explained: 'On paper I had everything, a good job, I was on the radio every day, I worked for GoCompare…
'But the reality was very different, I felt alone, I could feel alone in a room full of people.'
He also offered tips on coping mechanisms for those struggling, saying: 'It's the tiny things that help, it's a tiny thing to just pick up the phone or pop next door and ask 'How are you?', it's tiny, but it's so important'.
Help is available: Call the Samaritans on 116 123 for 24-hour support