Former New England Patriots star Tom Brady appeared on Netflix's “The Greatest Roast Of All Time: Tom Brady,” and the aftermath is still being felt. Some of those close to Brady took issue with the roasts, and his former teammate Wes Welker expressed why he was disappointed, too.

When Welker was asked if there was a favorite joke from the display, he gave this response, via Pro Football Network's Adam Beasley.: “Not really, I was a little disappointed in the Brady Roast. There was some funny stuff and everything, but you know, it was what it was.”

Welker did not say which jokes he did not like and explained why he was not in attendance for the roast like fellow former teammates Julian Edelman, Rob Gronkowski, and Drew Bledsoe.

“I was not asked to be a presenter. I was asked to sit on the side and get roasted, which I'm glad I wasn't there,” Welker told reporters. “To each their own, I guess.”

Wes Welker was one of Brady's go-to targets for six seasons. Welker amassed four All-Pro honors, totaled 37 touchdowns, and garnered at least 1,000 receiving yards in five of his six seasons. Welker was not the only one disappointed with some of the jokes Tom Brady was subject to.

Brady's family was reportedly not fond of some of the content. The legendary Patriots quarterback mostly had a good time but admitted he probably would not do it again.

Ex-Patriots legend Tom Brady reflects on infamous roast session 

Tom Brady talked about the impact the jokes from the session had on his kids.

“I loved when the jokes were about me, I thought they were so fun, I didn't like the way it affected my kids,” Brady said via The Pivot Podcast. “So it's the hardest part about like the bittersweet aspect of when you do something that you think is one way and then all a sudden you realize I wouldn't do that again because of the way that it affected actually the people that I care about the most in the world.”

Brady's ex-wife Gisele Bundchen was also reportedly upset with some of the roast's content.

“So like it's it makes you in some ways a better parent going through it because again,” Brady said. “Sometimes you're naïve you don't know or you get a little like oh s—t you know and, like I said when I signed up for that I loved when people were making fun of me.”

Brady summed the experience up with one final elaborate statement.

“So it's like I just wanted to like laugh and so I wanted to do the roast because the guy Jeff Ross became someone that I knew and you just don't see the full picture all the time,” Brady added. “So I think it's a good for me as a parent, I'm going to be a better parent as I go forward because of it, and at the same time I'm happy everyone who was there had a lot of fun, and I do think for me, just outside of let's say all that, it always is good like, if we're not laughing about things we're crying and I think we should have more fun.”

Although the aftermath was not the best, Brady feels as though he learned from the experience in addition to having a brief laugh.