PETE DAVIDSON has been slammed by his best friend and former SNL co-star after a recent claim.

The comedian purchased the boat with his former Saturday Night Live co-star, Colin Jost, in January 2022 but has since encountered numerous delays in getting it running.

Pete, 29, shared his regrets about buying the vessel with Entertainment Tonight while on the red carpet for the premiere of Transformers: Rise of the Beasts on Monday.

The subject came up when the reporter asked Pete if he'd be partying on the boat after the event.

"Yeah, if it's not sunk!" the funnyman responded.

He then added that he wasn't so sure about the future of the ferry boat, confessing that it was a decision he didn't make clear-headed.

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"I have no idea what's going on with that thing. Me and Colin were very stoned a year ago and bought a ferry. And we're figuring it out," Pete explained.

The King of Staten Island star then related his boat to the Transformers franchise, joking: "Hopefully, it turns into a Transformer and gets the f**k out of there so I can stop paying for it!"

Colin has now denied the former SNL castmate's claim that they were both stoned in a recent Instagram post.

The comedian shared a screenshot of an article explaining what Pete said.

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Colin wrote: "Is it worse that I was actually stone-cold sober when we bought the ferry?"

However, Colin is optimistic about the ferry's future: "We’re excited to prove the non-believers wrong. You’re going to be BEGGING to get on this ferry in two years. Mark my words."

PAY UP!

In November, a source with knowledge about Pete's ferry venture exclusively told The U.S. Sun that it would take a lot of money and manpower to get the vessel complete.

Pete, Colin, and other investors dropped $280,000 on the decommissioned ferry during an auction in January.

"This an extremely expensive undertaking, from refurbishing the vessel to finding a mooring, they are looking at several million dollars that will need to be sunk into the project - easily," the insider projected. 

"First off, every ferry built before 1965 had asbestos, so you have to mitigate any dangers there." 

And regarding reports of the ship possibly being infested with roaches, the source said that should be the least of the issues the project faces. 

"As far as roaches, you have a passenger ferry where people throw trash under the seats, and even with the best of extermination services, it's hard to stay ahead of that, but now that the ferry is no longer in service, the vermin should get cleaned up pretty easily with a good exterminator."

While cleaning up the infestation shouldn't be difficult, keeping the unwanted passengers from returning will be an ongoing battle once the docked ship welcomes guests again. 

"Keeping them at bay once the food and passengers are reintroduced is going to be an ongoing battle on the ship," the insider cautioned.  

The structural work will take up a lion's share overall price tag.

"It needs to be pulled out of the water, cleaned, dry docked, and painted. There has to be a way to drain the wastewater and the toilets."

"What you need for the boat to meet the Americans with Disabilities Act requirements will be another major expense. The boat will need things like escalators or an elevator." 

"They are going to need to retrofit the whole inside of the vessel, including the kitchen, and then making the bathrooms something that people actually want to use is another massive undertaking."

Once the investors finally have the ship ready for guests, the docking will eat into the budget.

"If they end up wanting to go anywhere along the New York City waterfront, and especially in an area like Manhattan, docking the ferry is going to be astronomically expensive." 

Colin cracked jokes last month about how much money they've sunk into the ferry, according to the New York Post.

"Financially, it's going great — we are printing money," Colin cracked. "It is our own money, it's 'Ferry Bucks,' but we are printing it desperately, hoping that a dock will take it for payment."

The insider added that the entire process of getting the boat ready should take several years.

IT'LL TAKE A WHILE

The Waterfront Alliance previously exclusively told The U.S. Sun that if the ship is ready for guests in five years - even that long would be incredibly fast considering the bureaucratic red tape the investors are facing. 

The comics who made the investment with Stand comedy club co-owner Paul Italia face serious logistical hurdles as well as bureaucratic red tape before their dream boat can be realized, as Cortney Worrell, president and CEO of the Waterfront Alliance, explained.  

"There is the issue of finding the space, which is number one, and then the other part is getting the permits."

Cortney elaborated: "The major challenge with finding a place for a very large boat is that the New York Harbor and the waterfront is extremely congested with not only boats that go in and out all the time, but the limited space that makes up what New York City in terms of its dense and compact urban life is exactly what's on the waterfront too.  

"Finding a large home for a very large ship is literally like building a skyscraper," Cortney added while explaining the infrastructure of mooring such a massive vessel will almost certainly necessitate building a slip to accommodate it. 

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"How much construction is needed and how much of a change to the land where this is attached to has to be taken into account in order to accommodate ADA accessibility."  

Then there is also the matter of ecological issues and passing standards for development if the ship is moored exclusively in one location.