‘Orange Is The New Black’ Cast Spills Season 2 Spoilers! Larry Bloom Actor Jason Biggs Angers Bachelorette Fans With Tweets

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"Orange Is the New Black" cast member Jason Biggs dropped some season 2 spoilers about his character Larry Bloom. He also stirred up some controversy, angering "The Bachelorette" fans recently. But recently he's been getting attention for a very different show: "The Bachelorette."

Biggs angered Bachelorette fans last week after tweeting jokes about Eric Hill, a "Bachelorette" contestant who tragically died in a paragliding accident.

"Crazy rule change- instead of voting off the contestants, this season #TheBachelorette gets to kill them off," Biggs tweeted.

"Here's what I can tell you without watching- 8 of the 20 guys are in the closet, all of them workout, and 2 can do simple division," he also tweeted, adding, "And 19 of them are still alive. #TooSoon."

Biggs didn't see the big deal, even choosing to retweet people's posts of outrage.

"The fact that my tweets can be seen as controversial is fascinating to me," Biggs told FOX411. "I'm constantly amazed."

Aside from remarking on his rather tasteless, #toosoon tweets, Biggs also dropped some spoilers about his "Orange Is the New Black" character Larry Bloom, the fiance of Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), sentenced to 15 months in prison for transporting drug money for her ex-girlfriend Alex Vause (Laura Prepon).

Biggs said to FOX411 that in season 2 of "Orange Is the New Black," Larry tries to get some answers about his relationship with Piper.

Biggs said, "I think he gets some clarity on where their relationship is going. Certainly at the beginning of the season Larry is trying to figure out if the damage done to the relationship last season is irreparable. Larry will make some decisions. I won't say if they are good or bad."

The "American Pie" actor also said filming "Orange Is the New Black" episodes feels more like a 13-hour movie than a television show.

"Because of all 13 being released at once, it doesn't need a true ending to each episode necessarily," Biggs told Fox411. "The narrative is allowed to take time to develop.

"It's freeing," he added. "There are still people to answer to, of course. But I do know for a fact that Netflix gives its creators a lot more freedom."

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