Carole Baskin has confirmed that the Oklahoma zoo, made famous in the hit Netflix show <i>Tiger King</i> and previously belonging to Joe Exotic, has been sold. The Big Cat Rescue sanctuary owner took control of the former wild animal park after winning a $1 million trademark lawsuit against Exotic in mid-2020. She previously said she wanted to sell the zoo but had a special stipulation for the new owners. "When we sold the property in June, we required that it never be used as a zoo, or for anything related to <i>Tiger King</i> or anything like that," Baskin told <i>Yahoo</i>. Her husband, Howard Baskin, also stated that the couple had it written into the deed that the property cannot be associated with <i>Tiger King </i>in any way. "If it became an RV park or storage unit – we don't want it named the Tiger King RV Park. We would like the 20 years of mistreatment of animals there to be forgotten and be history," he said. Baskin and Exotic were the stars of the Netflix docuseries <i>Tiger King</i> that was released in March 2020. It became one of the streaming service’s most talked about shows, thanks to its outrageous tales and colourful characters, and was watched 34 million times in only 10 days. Last week, it was announced a second season of the show would be coming to the streaming platform. While Netflix is yet to reveal much about what it will entail, it has updated the show’s synopsis page with a “coming soon” banner, alerting viewers that more <i>Tiger King</i> content is on the way. However, we do know that Exotic – real name Joseph Allen Maldonado-Passage – is now in prison after being convicted of plotting murder-for-hire against Baskin, as well as a string of wildlife crimes. He has served two years of his 22-year sentence and has made a number of unsuccessful bids for parole. It is unclear whether he will feature in the new season of the Netflix show, although Baskin has already said she will decline any follow-up. She said she was led to believe the docuseries would portray her differently than it did, focusing on the mysterious disappearance of her first husband. “I told them to lose my number,” the Big Cat Rescue owner told <i>Page Six</i>. “Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.”