'Bachelor' Juan Pablo Galavis Blames Cultural Differences Over Latest Controversy

(Courtesy of ABC)

This undated image released by ABC shows Juan Pablo Galavis, star of the 18th edition of "The Bachelor" airing Mondays on ABC. (AP Photo/ABC, Craig Sjodin)

Recent immigrants who barely speak English seem to make fewer gaffes with the English language than American-born Juan Pablo Galavis.

“The Bachelor” star, who grew up in Venezuela, once again blamed his background after he came under fire for making light of offensive language. Galavis encountered a backlash after he retweeted someone apparently poking fun at the mentally handicap and who used the r word.

"Not every flower can save love, but a rose can,” said the tweet. “Not every plant survives thirst, but a cactus can. Not every r***** can read, but look at you go, little buddy!”

Galavis not only retweeted it, but he also wrote: “Loved it.”

Galavis brushed off the controversy, and blamed his poor choice of words on the fact that English is his second language.

“In Venezuela the R word is USED commonly and by NO means is to OFFEND anyone… #Relax #DifferentCulture #Respect,” he wrote on Twitter.

He later deleted the tweet, though he told his followers to “learn culture.”

It wasn’t the first time a statement landed "The Bachelor" in hot water. Earlier this year, he said he opposed having a gay “Bachelor” because homosexuals were “perverts, in a sense.” He later apologized and blamed his choice of words on a language barrier.

Follow us on twitter.com/foxnewslatino
Like us at facebook.com/foxnewslatino

Load more..