Rudy Giuliani's lavish lifestyle — including his binge watching and Uber tabs — is earning him scorn from creditors who are accusing him of "gross mismanagement."

In a court paper filed this week, Giuliani's unsecured creditors alleged that he was blowing off obligations he incurred when he filed for bankruptcy late last year.

"More than five months ago, the Debtor commenced his bankruptcy case," reads court papers filed on Tuesday. "One might ask what he has accomplished during that time. An objective review leads to one conclusion: he has accomplished almost nothing."

The document has creditors accusing Giuliani of failing to curtail such excesses like “60 Amazon transactions, charges for entertainment such as Netflix, Prime Video, Kindle, Audible, Paramount+ and Apple services and products and numerous Uber rides.”

"After the Debtor provided the Committee with the American Express credit card statements as supporting documentation... the Committee gained insight into [Giuliani's] egregious spending habits," it notes.

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The filing was first reported by The Independent.

Giuliani filed for Chapter 11 protection soon after a Fulton County jury awarded $148 million to Georgia election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman for the reputational and emotional harm they weathered when Giuliani falsely accused them of stealing votes from President Donald Trump.

Since then, Giuliani was let go from his WABC radio talk show gig, fought for his Palm Beach condo, and started hawking coffee as a means of generating revenue to pay the judgement.

Earlier this month, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane expressed frustration at the pace of the progress to dealing with the former New York City mayor's financial problems.

His attorney Heath Berger, expressed optimism at the time: “They finally have, I think, gotten things on track.”