Quote:
Originally Posted by Robbie
But then again...they might not have been employed in the first place if not for him.
The guy who plays his brother? He'd probably be selling insurance.
The kid? He'd be in school.
The fat lady that plays the maid? Unemployed.
The woman who plays their mom? Unemployed.
Everybody on that set and the network itself has made a ton of money because of him. And remember: He hasn't missed any work. He has shown up sober and ready to roll every day of production.
They are doing this simply based on being politically correct. The CBS network doesn't really care about Charlie Sheen on a personal level. The only people who do love him like that would be his own family.
I think this whole thing is overblown. If he wants to party with porn stars and do blow on his offtime..so what? I like doing that too. It's nobodies business. He's a grown man.
Now if he shows up on set all fucked up? Then THAT is a problem.
But he hasn't. Matter of fact he kicks ass at work and is the shining star of the show. This whole thing is just more of our country and it's moralistic bullshit in my opinion.
If he does get too fucked up and dies from too much partying one night...so what? He's a big boy (an adult). He can do what he chooses. Hopefully that won't happen.
I've been doing massive quantities of recreational drugs and fucking whores since 1978 and I'm not only alive...but in great shape. lol
Now if he were addicted and legally doing prescription drugs, then I would be worried. But doing blow? The main thing he has to worry about there is keeping his cock hard.
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My take on it was that there was really not much of an issue with Charlie being Charlie. Production was set to resume next week. Until he had his meltdown regarding the producer. Here are a few choice quotes:
""I violently hate Chaim Levine (Chuck Lorre). He's a stupid, stupid little man and a pussy punk that I'd never want to be like." Charlie adds, "That's me being polite."
"That piece of shitt [Lorre] took money out of my pocket, my family's pocket, and, most importantly, my second family -- my crew's pocket."
"You can tell him [Lorre] one thing. I own him."
Star or not, in the end, Charlie still is a working stiff, and I don't know many places where you can run your mouth off publicly about people higher than you on the company ladder and expect to keep your job.