If you've ever accidentally danced too hard to "Sugalumps" or accidentally serenaded your intended with "The Most Beautiful Girl (in the Room)," Thursday was a sad day for you.

That's the day New Zealand's almost-award-winning, fourth-most-popular folk duo broke the sad news that they were pulling the plug on their HBO series, "Flight of the Conchords." After two rapturously received seasons of Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement's adventures trying to make it in New York, the show's co-creators announced that they are calling it quits.

"We've noticed the less we say about the future of the show, the more people want to talk about it, so in an effort to reverse this trend we are today announcing that we won't be returning for a third season," Clement, McKenzie and executive producer James Bobin wrote in a statement on their official site. "We're very proud of the two seasons we made, and we like the way the show ended. We'd like to thank everyone who helped make the show and also everyone who watched it. While the characters Bret and Jemaine will no longer be around, the real Bret and Jemaine will continue to exist."

According to the Hollywood Reporter, the show was difficult to produce, both because the stars still live in New Zealand and because it was challenging to weave the pair's inventive, multi-genre songs into story lines.

Despite their fictional struggle to get a big break in New York on the show, actor Clement was nominated for a Best Actor in a Comedy Series Emmy in 2009, and the show earned two Emmy nominations in 2008 (Best Directing in a Comedy Series and Best Writing in a Comedy Series).