Ronda Rousey hasn't checked Twitter replies since doing 'The Ultimate Fighter'

UFC women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is closing in on a million Twitter followers, but she hasn't read a single message directed towards her in nearly two years.

The most dominant fighter in MMA and new Sports Illustrated cover girl promises that she still handles all of her own social media, but she never looks at her mentions when she logs onto Twitter.

It's not because she's overwhelmed with messages or she just can't spare the time.

The fact is people on Twitter are just too mean.

"I haven't read my Twitter mentions since "The Ultimate Fighter"," Rousey revealed when speaking to Sirius XM radio this week. "People in general on Twitter are just mean. I feel like Instagram and Facebook, they're nicer."

Rousey says the really nasty messages started after she coached the reality show opposite Miesha Tate in 2013 and ever since then she just can't look at Twitter the same.

She's made no bones about the bad taste left in her mouth after doing TUF, especially after the former Strikeforce women's champion pulled out some very dirty tactics to try and get her team riled up.

The biggest incident happened when Tate and her team started making fun of her head coach Edmond Tarverdyan with jokes she says bordered on racist.

"Our team was very dependent on having my head coach there, he was our only striking coach, so they were trying to instigate anyway possible to get him in a fight to get him kicked off the show so we wouldn't have a striking coach," Rousey explained.

"After they made us promise not to do anything instigate to mess with the other team at all and they just kept on at it with the eyebrow thing at Edmond. I train with all Armenians and that is an extremely offensive thing to do. That's just as offensive as if they dropped off some lotion for Chris Beal and they're like 'why is Ronda angry?."

When the show finished filming and aired, Rousey just didn't have time for the negativity being spewed in her direction, so she chose to enjoy Twitter as an outlet but no longer needed the feedback she received from it.

So chances are if you're wishing Rousey congratulations on Twitter today for her new magazine cover or the release of her autobiography 'My Fight, Your Fight', she almost assuredly appreciates it, she'll just never see it.