Culture March 21, 2019

'Empire' creator Lee Daniels shares cast reaction to Jussie Smollett fallout

WATCH: 'Empire' creator breaks his silence on Jussie Smollett

It's been over a week since "Empire" actor Jussie Smollett pleaded not guilty to charges he lied to police about being the victim of an alleged hate crime in January.

Now, "Empire" co-creator Lee Daniels is revealing a bit about how he and the show's cast are dealing with the fallout.

(MORE: 'Empire' producer 'confident' show will not be canceled after Jussie Smollett controversy)

"Oh my god ... these past couple of weeks have been a freakin' roller coaster," Daniels said in a brief video posted to his Instagram on Wednesday night to promote the show. "We have -- me and my cast -- experienced pain and anger and sadness and frustration and really don't know how to deal with it, you know?"

Daniels goes on: "Everything has happened -- what you are seeing tonight -- prior to the incident. And this is not what the show is made for. The show is made to bring America together, to talk about the atrocities that are happening right now in the streets."

Daniels was one of the first people to support Smollett after he first reported the incident, calling the young actor his "son" and telling him to stay strong. The rest of the cast followed suit.

Derek Henkle/AFP/Getty Images
Actor Jussie Smollett and his team arrive for a court hearing at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on March 12, 2019, in Chicago.

Ratings for last week's "Empire," the first original episode to air since Smollett's arrest, weren't good. According to the The Wrap, the episode drew the show's second-smallest audience ever.

(MORE: 'Empire' actor Jussie Smollett hit with 16 count felony indictment by grand jury)

But the show's executive producer, Brett Mahoney, told Entertainment Weekly earlier this month that "he's "confident" there will be another season.

In regards to Smollett being written out of the final two episodes, Mahoney said it was a "difficult decision" but one they were able to make work because of the "strong ensemble" and available stories to tell.

For now, Mahoney said he's "trusting the process and allowing the legal process to play out."

Smollett was indicted on 16 felony counts related to his claim that he was the victim of a racially-motivated attack by two masked men in Chicago in January.

After an investigation, police declared the attack a hoax and said Smollett hired two brothers to carry it out.

Smollett pleaded not guilty to all charges March 14 and maintains his innocence.