Netflix star fears hell get cancelled ahead of release of unfiltered doc

Life Coach Lewis Raymond Taylor has confessed he fears it could be the end of his career, following the release of his candid Netflix documentary The Psychopath Life Coach.

The streaming platform recently released the candid one-off doc which tells the story of 33-year-old Lewis and how he transformed his criminal life and became a millionaire. The story also gives viewers insight into his academy, The Coaching Masters and whether Lewis is in fact a psychopath.

But ahead of the show's debut, Lewis revealed that he worried that it could be the end of him as he might get "cancelled" by viewers. Speaking exclusively to Daily Star at the premiere of The Psychopath Life Coach, he said: "I'm a little bit excited, a little bit apprehensive, there is always that chance of am I gonna get cancelled or am I gonna be a worldwide superstar, I'm not quite sure right now."

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Sharing further insight into the doc, he said: "To be honest, it's raw, it's unfiltered, I've not held things back. It's been edited in a way that's a true representation of the different sides of me and there is no conclusion to who I am or what I am, it's down to the viewers to decide, so it's unbiased," he explained.

In the documentary, viewers will follow Lewis' transition from prisoner to becoming the joint owner of The Coaching Masters which is now worth £20million and how he struggled with several things from his past including antisocial personality disorder, emotionally unstable personality disorder, and bipolar II disorder throughout his life. Adding to this, he also had a traumatic and abusive childhood which appeared to fuel his tumultuous beginnings/

In his teens and early twenties, Lewis became a drug addict as well as a drug dealer and was often involved in gut-wrenching fights. In the doc, one of his friends said he was becoming more uncontrollable as time went on.

Lewis from Hertfordshire, said in a previous interview: "As a kid, I picked the easiest way to get attention – crime. I kept being told I was a bad kid so in the end I thought I couldn't do anything about it – people thought I was bad anyway.

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"Things spiralled out of control at 18. I was drinking and taking cocaine – I got addicted to the power and reputation I was getting as 'the crazy one'. I just went on to self-sabotage – the convictions were racking up but the damage I had done to my life didn't even enter my mind," he openly explained.

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