Charlie Sheen's successor on the sitcom is "quite likable," finds Tom Gliatto
A private arbitrator, not a judge, will decide if Charlie Sheen's lawsuit against the producer and studio that fired him from his hit CBS TV sitcom will ultimately be heard by a jury in a court trial, a judge ruled Wednesday.
"I'm going to work my ass off and entertain the hell out of people!" says Kutcher
Charlie Sheen's $100 million lawsuit against his former employer is scheduled to come to a Los Angeles courtroom Tuesday.
Kareen Wynter has the latest on reports that Charlie Sheen's soon-to-be ex-wife, Brooke Mueller, is back in drug rehab.
The actor, who played a Cleveland Indian in Major League, had a warm audience Tuesday
Time Warner acknowledged to the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday that Charlie Sheen is suing its Warner Bros. unit for $100 million.
Actor Charlie Sheen, fired from his hit comedy series, has filed a $100 million lawsuit against Warner Bros. Television and Chuck Lorre, the creator of "Two and a Half Men," a Los Angeles Superior Court spokeswoman said Thursday.
The suit cites Chuck Lorre's "ego and self interest" in allegedly breaking Sheen's contract
"I'll apologize to Jon right now," says Sheen, following Tuesday's rant about his former costar. "I was in a mood"
Joy Behar talks with HLN's Dr. Drew about Charlie Sheen's bizarre behavior after being fired from "Two and a Half Men."
You wouldn't have expected Charlie Sheen to go quietly after his increasingly bizarre behavior prompted his TV bosses to fire him from "Two and a Half Men," and Sheen would not want to disappoint you.
Addiction specialist and HLN host Dr. Drew Pinsky weighs in on the behavior of actor Charlie Sheen.
The actor in his latest live webcast also continues to bash Two and a Half Men creator Chuck Lorre
A scathing letter portrays Sheen as sick, destructive and urgently in need of help
"After careful consideration," producers "terminated" his work "effective immediately"
Warner Bros. Television has fired actor Charlie Sheen from its comedy "Two and a Half Men" after a two-week public meltdown by the star that has included attacks on the show's creator.
Charlie Sheen threatened to kill his estranged wife over the weekend, according to a declaration made in a restraining order against the actor.
Charlie Sheen was forced to turn his twin boys over to their mother after a court-ordered custody and restraining order.
"If I realize that I'm insane, then I'm okay with it," the actor tells PEOPLE
Despite stopping production on the sitcom "Two and a Half Men," Warner Bros. Television said Tuesday it will pay the show's crew for the four episodes initially set to begin production this week.
Charlie Sheen talks about the possibility of John Stamos replacing him on his hit CBS show.
Capping a day of bombastic assertions and harsh accusations on the airwaves and internet, embattled actor Charlie Sheen lashed out Monday at addiction specialists and sitcom executives while proclaiming himself clean and focused thanks to an "epiphanous awakening."
Charlie Sheen tells CNN's Piers Morgan about his regrets, and if he's clean right now.
"If my right and wrong is a little bit different," he says, "then my kids will be different"
"I'm underpaid," says the TV star, who's "tired of pretending I'm not special"
The Two and a Half Men costar is "not on Facebook or Twitter," says his rep
A New Yorker who likes to do things "his way," Lorre is known as a hard worker
With his show halted, the actor says from the Bahamas that his next project is "fatherhood" and fun
The actor tells PEOPLE that detractors should beware: "This is me warming up"
Despite Two and a Half Men's shutdown, the star plans to be on the set next week
CBS cites the actor's "statements, conduct and condition" for ending the season early
"I'm dealing with fools and trolls," says the star, with broadsides against women and even Thomas Jefferson
Magazine Marie Claire garners controversy over an article that mocks overweight actors and said they shouldn't be on TV.
Two things we won't miss from this summer: the heat and the lack of quality television.
Although in "good humor" on set, he shows the "weight of something hanging on him," Cryer tells PEOPLE
If the world of entertainment is any indication, the geeks shall inherit the Earth.