But while the show and chain are now a thing of the past, the saga continues: Woods is publicly blaming Chipotle for his failure.
According to TMZ, Woods is angry because Chipotle was supposed to furnish a crack management team for each of his outposts that would stay on for at least a year and help him smoothly transition into running a three-shop operation. Instead, he says, the Denver-based burrito empire sent him a group of inexperienced hacks who couldn't cook soul food or run a soul food restaurant. Oh, and they bailed just shy of two months. Which, claims Woods, is why his restaurants failed.
Then again, investors give negative cash flows and the challenges of the fast-casual industry as the reasons they pulled out so early in the game. As for the management teams, well, maybe Ells was holding onto his best people for his own new concept, ShopHouse Southeast Asian Kitchen, slated to open its first restaurant in Washington, DC, in the next month or so.
Though he hasn't taken legal action -- yet -- Woods also says the show owes him his promised first-year salary of $46,000.
Will America's Next Great Restaurant become America's Next Great Lawsuit?