Piers Morgan Uncensored - ‘This Generation’s JFK Moment’ Charlie Sheen On Kirk Assassination + Baring ALL In New Book
Episode Date: September 16, 2025Formerly the highest paid TV actor in Hollywood, Charlie Sheen broke the internet before anyone knew what that really meant with his 2011 meltdown. Fourteen years later, after revealing his TigerBlo...od to the world, he’s back with a new book and documentary with some fresh revelations about his eventful life. In a refreshingly honest interview, Sheen shares insight on his new life of sobriety, how his road went down such a different path to Matthew Perry’s and what it was like to hear about the tragic passing of Charlie Kirk alongside Joe Rogan - plus he gets reminded of the time he told Piers, “let’s get wasted!” Piers Morgan Uncensored is proudly independent and supported by: Ground News: Ground News: Go to https://groundnews.com/PIERS for 40% off the Vantage subscription and find the truth mainstream media doesn't want you to see. Oxford Natural: To watch their full stories, scan the QR code on your screen or visit https://oxfordnatural.com/piers/ to get 70% off your first order when you use code PIERS. Preorder Woke is Dead by Piers Morgan: https://harpercollins.co.uk/products/woke-is-dead-how-common-sense-triumphed-in-an-age-of-total-madness-piers-morgan?variant=55075055763835 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I mean, there are some revelations in the book that I was not expecting.
You're incredibly honest and revealing.
What I'd owned for a long time as an experience was what it felt like to always keep that stuff hidden.
So I thought, all right, let's just find out what the world's going to feel like with all that stuff out there.
Did it feel like you were winning at the time, though?
No.
You were on air with Joe Rogan last week when the horrific news.
came that Charlie Kirk
had been killed.
First, I immediately thought just in the family
dynamic and component in the value
of what was just ripped from all of them
forever. Yeah, it's
a trip, man. I mean,
what the hell was that?
Charlie Sheen's
legacy as a pop culture icon
is our rival, first as a movie star
the 80s and 90s, later as
the best paid TV star in the world.
But there's little doubt that his televised
meltdown in 2011 is what truly cemented his legacy as a showbiz legend.
Charlie Sheen broke the internet before anybody even knew all that really meant.
This is why.
Built by trolls. Keep that in mind.
Phones were built by trolls.
Okay, that gives us like 6,000 hours.
Okay, great, great, great.
Well, as it should be, duh.
People need to hear my gold as it rolls out, not as it's like disappearing,
disappearing like so many freaking, you know, magicians, rabbits.
We are in the, in the middle of a movement here, an odyssey of epic,
proportions, epic, epic proportions.
Well, hello, duh.
I had more than fun. I had me with it.
Some are saying that you're bipolar.
Wow, what does that mean?
I guess that, you know, you're on two ends of the spectrum.
Wow. And then what? What's the cure? Medicine?
Make me like them? Not going to happen. I'm by winning.
Well, now, 14 years after revealing his tiger blood to the world, Sheen is back to reflect
and is a astonishing life in a brutally honest new memoir, The Book of Sheem.
as well as a Netflix documentary, aka Charlie Sheen.
And the great man himself joins me.
Now, Charlie Sheen, how great to see it.
Likewise, Pierce. How's it going?
Do you know what?
I found a picture of us.
You can't see it, but we're going to show the viewers.
It's a picture of you and I at the opening of Planet Hollywood
in Aspen, Colorado in 1994, both clutching pairs of skis,
which we didn't actually use.
It's a most amusing photograph.
It was a hilarious interview.
And I feel like every few years or so
for the rest of the next 31 years,
we've had some collision,
somewhere in the world,
that's been highly entertaining.
And I'm expecting this to be exactly the same.
Yes, we have.
How are you? You look great.
No, no pressure. No pressure.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you. I would say the same
if I could see you.
I'm confident you are.
You're usually dapper and dazzling.
himself. Thank you, Charlie. You say all the nicest things. You know, the reason we played the
2011 Tiger Bluffs stuff, that was actually from the CNN interview that you and I did at the time,
which was electrifying. It got huge audience around the world. It was you at kind of peak
mayhem when you'd walked out on two and a half men. When you look back at that period in your life,
you do so very honestly in the book.
But how are you today compared to that Charlie Sheen?
Thankfully, nothing about today bears any resemblance to that other thing.
That other bizarre.
It was interesting in the lead-in, or in the intro, to just.
hear it and not see it, but everything I heard, I could still see, you know, what, what,
what those accompanying visuals that were treating all of us to, yeah, it's a, it's a trip, man.
I mean, what, what the hell was that?
I mean, I know that's your question for me, but it's, that's where I'm still at with it.
I still can't figure out, you know, what, what was I trying to prove?
You know, I think I made my point early on, and somebody should have, you know, in vaudeville, that hook comes out and quick exit, stage left or right or trap door.
Yeah, that, that moment felt like it was always kind of, you know, just right there, but it never happened when it should have.
And I think another thing, peers, is that I didn't anticipate that, and I talk about it in the book,
that this, you know, I, that the world I said goodnight to six hours earlier was not the one that I woke up into with, you know, with folk ballads and rap songs and people on the march and just like this whole rallying army of fans and enthusiasts for, I unintentionally tapped into something that they might have been feeling as well, something similar.
something akin to, you know, giving it to the man.
But, you know, the dumbest, the silliest thing about it all, you know, winning,
it was like one of the most losing, defeated moments of my life.
You know, there was nothing winning about it, you know.
Did it feel like you were winning at the time, though?
Did you genuinely feel you were on this kind of liberating,
Who say?
No.
That's the thing.
Maybe like on day one or two, because the interview with Andrew Canning, and imagine just like what
that, like from her point of view, what that whole thing must have looked like and sounded
like and felt like it.
It was just like, whoa.
But, you know, kudos to her for just like, like, like just standing right in the in the mouth
of the volcano, you know.
but it
no it
yeah it just
man it just got away from me
you know it just got away from me
but but
you know and
what I describe in the book
is that you know all those catchphrases
and t-shirts and aerial
advertising I literally saw a plane
fly by with
with winning
I mean like yeah that that happened
none of that was my original
material
which which which
which I explained.
I explained it in the doc.
They didn't use it, but it's in the book.
You know, it came from a random conversation
with a baseball player named Brian Wilson,
who was, I think, trying to give me a pep talk.
And then as the interview was starting to go a little south,
all of those slogans and sayings that he had sort of injected into my psyche,
they were just kind of on a loop looking for the right or the completely
wrong place to suddenly
emerge, and they
did.
You know, Charlie, my vivid memory
of it, I was kind of caught up
in all this, as you know, because
even before the interview, you just
reference, you turned up, we'd
booked you to appear on CNN
at my studio in Los Angeles.
It was live. We'd
build it to the world. We've got Charlie
Sheen, the man of the moment,
coming. I think you turned up four
minutes before airtime in a big stretch. It was a mayback, a mayback car,
one of those huge maybacks. You got up with the most random collection of people I'd ever
seen in my life. You came in, you gave me a hug, you ran in the studio, you sat down literally
as we started rolling the intro, and you gave me an unbelievably searing, entertaining,
slightly mad, I'll be honest, interview for an hour. But my absolute takeaway,
And I can tell you why it's my takeaway,
is that halfway through,
and we'll play the clip now,
you won't see it, but the viewers will.
It's a moment when I ask you,
are you drug-free?
And you say you took a test two days before,
you just had the results back,
and you hand me your test results.
So we're going to watch the clip
so that the viewers know what I'm talking about.
And I think you probably remember this.
Okay, cool.
Let me ask a direct question.
Are you under the influence right now of any substances?
No, nothing.
and the influence of you.
Off from the drug of doing this interview.
You.
Yes.
That may not be the best influence.
I'll take it.
I'll take it.
It looks pretty cool to me, you know?
But you took a drug test to prove that you are currently completely drug-free.
Yeah, we're not at those results.
You actually got the results on you?
Well, yeah, these days, I mean, carry this stuff with you, right?
And when was this taken?
It was taken.
What was it taken yesterday?
And this is...
The day before.
So assuming this is accurate, which I believe it is,
this is completely clean.
So when was the last time you took a drug?
I don't know, because I'm not being held hostage by AA anymore.
I don't count my days because it puts such a premium on them.
And then you're running around with your days, going, oh, God, don't lose your days,
boom, I lost my days.
And then it's like, where did my days go?
Now, the reason that has stayed with me, Charlie, so vividly,
is that you may not remember this, but in the next commercial break,
you autographed your drug test results for me,
and you wrote on it,
two peers, let's get hammered, love Charlie,
and I've now got that framed in my bar, in my L.A.
That's amazing.
That's amazing.
Wow, I'm, you know, just putting it aside just for one second,
just, you know, everything that had to happen
that led to that oneing up framed, you know,
in your home bar.
I'm honored.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah, that was the
test I did
with Dylan Howard
at my house.
And I think it was during a live feed.
Yeah.
I mean, obviously that test didn't
include or
one of the panels
wasn't for testosterone cream.
Right.
Because that's
the
stuff, as I say in the book, I was, I was slathering on like a freaking Pons commercial.
Yeah, that's the one that really got the, I think it, if you use too much, at those levels,
it'll metabolize into like a roid rage, you know, and I think that's part of the, a lot of
the aggressiveness of, you know, that whole run, you know.
But that's such a trip, because I remember, I had this cool home theater at the place where I was speaking to you from,
and I was pacing back and forth.
And then, like, there was like, there was this last moment where you were like, it's now or never.
I did a yes or a no.
And I saw the green light.
I saw the green light of yes, just flash.
And that's when I said, I'm on my way, you know.
We also, if I'm, correct me if I'm wrong, because a lot of people do, no, is that there was a telephone involved at some point.
Am I correct in remembering that or no?
There was a telephone.
What was it doing?
That we put out a number, we had it on the desk and we said that we wanted Chuck Lorry to call this number.
Yes, I think we did.
Do you remember this part of it?
We did.
We urged Chuck Lurie, who always.
see, it was his show, two and a half-man, we urged him to call in and see if we can broker a peace
deal.
Right, right, right, yeah.
You know, I actually have to commend and, you know, the fact that he, that he didn't call
his actual, that was a really smart move on his part, you know.
Charlie, it's interesting thing.
I mean, what I have called him if, sorry.
No, I was going to say it's interesting.
Go ahead, sorry.
When I looked back at that interview we did, it was great, highly entertaining,
but at the heart of it was a real human being going through a lot of difficult stuff.
And you've laid that out in the book very honestly, and the doc.
And it's interesting because you kind of say that people that almost encouraged you at the time.
And I would categorize myself possibly as one of those people,
that it's all a bit of fun and it doesn't really matter,
that they were enabling you and were part of the problem.
You're not on that list.
Okay.
And I'm not saying that just because we're here right now.
You're not on that list because you were brave enough, gracious enough to offer me a venue, a forum to come out and try to describe some portion of my side of the story.
you know, and so I didn't see that as you trying to capitalize on the insanity of the moment.
I saw you as like being a, being an ally in that moment.
And I mean that sincerely.
And so, and that's connected to the trust and the friendship, you know, personally, professionally that we established, you know, at 8,000 feet above sea level back in 94, you know.
So, yeah, and that's what it was about.
You know, you needed me, like, back then, and then here we are,
and that circle is closing for me to need you in that moment.
You know, what's really...
Outside of that.
Yeah.
I think what's really interesting.
No, I'm saying, but...
Yeah, but...
Go ahead.
Finish your point.
You, the stuff that you just illustrated about, yeah,
the enabling and the media and everybody really kind of treating it like it was uh it was uh you know
some type of a carnival or extended parade or you know yeah that that i that i'm i completely support
yeah yeah because you paint a picture really that when you're as big as you were two and a half
man biggest show on tv you're the highest paid guy in world television you're at the top of your game
but you then inevitably, you're surrounded by people
who want a piece of bad action without actually deserving one.
And they're all at you.
And your ego is running riot.
You're loving the attention.
They want a piece of you.
You want a piece of the big party and everything else.
And it's a kind of, it's like a roller coaster ride
that is almost inevitably, as history tells us,
going to end badly.
Did you feel that at the time?
Or was there a moment of a way,
for you when you thought, you know what,
this is just going to end in me dying?
I, um, I, the, the death thing was,
if it was a list of, of 10 reasons to get the train back into the station,
that was like number seven or eight, which is a trip now,
because that should have been 1A.
Yeah, no, that was never, I could tell, you know, internally, um,
internally, in whatever quiet moments I was able to carve out during that whole thing, that supernova,
yeah, I would sit with, try to sit inside of it and, you know, know that it was not, there was no, there was no happy ending.
There was nothing at the end of that roller coaster
that didn't look like losing the brakes
smashing through that final guardrail
and just over the falls into the abyss.
You know, yeah, but it's, yeah,
how death wasn't sort of the driving, you know,
force or factor is a little bit curious.
When you look at what happened to a friend of yours, Matthew Perry, for example,
do you feel lucky that that wasn't you?
I mean, people have categorized it as he always seemed very unhappy with his addictive life,
whereas you, by contrast, when it was going on, seemed happy, like you were having a good time.
He never exuded an air of happiness about it.
When you look at what happened to him, and he once actually filled in for me on my show at CNN.
And I remember it was very funny.
He did a very funny imitation of me and so on.
It was very nice.
But I felt there was a real tragic story,
the Matthew Perry story, which ended just awfully tragically.
Whereas you, I look at you today, Charlie.
And honestly, again, I'm not saying this just because you're sitting here,
but you just look fantastic.
You look healthy.
You look well.
You look positive.
You look on it.
And I'll come to what I think about that in a moment.
But the contrast is very stark.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I think, you know, what I saw, I didn't know Matthew that well.
He's in my book.
And, you know, what I saw, because I read his book, and I read it in a day, and I loved it.
And I'm so proud of him and inspired by it.
And then I wanted to reach out, you know, because I'm in his book, you know, when he says, F, Charlie Sheen.
And I'm going to be that famous one day, too.
and and I and I didn't.
I think he, I think he died like three weeks after I read the book.
But do you wish you'd go through to it, Charlie?
Yeah, I don't, yeah, I don't know that I could have affected any part of what ultimately happened, right?
but I could see when he was promoting it
and I could feel that sort of the prison that he'd put himself in
because I could tell he wasn't sober talking about a book
that is all about sobriety and recovery and you know coming coming out of the
that thing that I describe you know veterans of the unspeakable
the downy quote you know and I felt really I feel
felt bad for him. And I, then when I heard a little snippet from the audiobook, he didn't have that
perfect, specific, laser-focused diction that he always had, you know, delivering comedy or anything
at the level that he did. So I could hear a man who was, I could hear him handicapped, and I could
see him on a couple of the shows. And I watched him on Bill Maher with the book. And I don't know.
if I'd agreed at the time that I was,
maybe I'd already agreed to,
that I was going to do mine,
and I kind of had this weird moment with him
through the television that if I wind up in that chair with Bill,
with my own frickin book,
I'm not going to be anything but completely present
and focused and in the moment and just, you know, every shade of loss.
Which you were last week.
I watched it.
I watched it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And I felt that the other night, and I didn't get into it.
Because Bill kind of tossed a few curveballs that I swung over the top of early on in the interview.
So I wasn't, my A game was just a little left to center.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, but it was great to see you on it, actually.
And I was so happy when I knew you were coming on here.
I mean, there are some revelations in the book that I was not expecting.
you're incredibly honest and revealing,
one of which, of course, is you talk about your period of your life
where you went through a period of bisexuality,
you contracted HIV.
Tell me about that.
How difficult a decision was it to tell everybody about this?
It's not just how the news is told, but what's left out, which concerns me.
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It was, man, wow.
Preparing for the documentary, it was, we were doing a lot of that prep work.
And it was, the start date for the documentary and the book were on a collision course.
So in all of the prep work with Andrew Renzi, the director, who's a freaking genius, by the way,
and a lovely man, he said, look, man,
you know, we gotta get into some of this other stuff
because in the deep, deep, deep dive
that he took in his research,
he says there's a lot of rumors out there, dude,
about you and men, you know?
And I said, okay, all right, cool.
Yeah, let's figure out a way to deal with that
without it feeling like we're doing a TMZ expose,
some of that garbage, right?
So we figured out how to do it, I think,
respectfully and, you know, just in a very mature way, right?
And then in the book, you know, I had some fun with the
with the symbology and the verbiage and how I kind of dealt with
some of that. But what I knew, like what I, what I'd owned for a long
time as an experience was what it felt like to always keep
that stuff hidden, to always walk around knowing there's
videos out there that I paid to
make go away, knowing there's people out there
that I paid to, you know, zip, zip
zip it. And so I
have a universe of
those feelings
and I
didn't at the time have
one
molecule of
what it would feel like
out there. And so I thought,
okay, all right,
I don't like, I don't like
this version. I don't like
you know, that thing that I kind of sequestered myself into.
So I thought, all right, let's just find out what the world's going to feel like
with all that stuff out there.
And every story I wrote about, you know, how I'm going to be like yelled at in the street
or dealt with at the bank or, you know, barred from the van from the supermarket or the car wash,
none of that has come true
people are like hey man
yeah right on right on
it's a part of your story it's not you know
it's not the whole story it's a part it's one of your
experiences and people are
like applauding that
that I was
brave enough to
to do that
and and it's
it's such a relief
yeah it's such a relief
you know
and and I don't have a shred of regret
the other thing fairs is
is if you're going to,
if you're going to put something in a,
in a documentary and in a book,
you, you better damn well be prepared
to discuss it in moments like this,
or in the street, or at the drugstore,
or, you know what I'm saying?
Yes.
So, and it takes the pressure off of other people.
And just one more thing about that,
people look at that story,
and they know that the kind of the, you know,
reputationally, what a drug like crack cocaine
can do to your brain sexually.
So if people read this whole thing,
even the crazy story in the book, Escape from L.A., right?
And if something like that wasn't in there,
don't you think the whims would have been a part of,
you know what I'm saying?
People's feelings about the book.
Yeah, so it would be glaringly absent
if it wasn't included.
And, I'm sorry, I'm going on about this.
And I hope it opens a door or maybe, you know, spurs something in someone else sitting behind, you know, similar secrets and feelings and trapped in it.
I hope that someone else just, I'm not even talking about somebody famous, just someone else out in the world, like, you know, sits down with their parents at dinner and says, hey, so Sheen, we all saw the thing with Shane.
Well, that, you know, we have that in common.
So who knows?
That's kind of the bonus stuff that can come as a result.
And if it does, then awesome.
I get the sense, Charlie.
You were waiting for this kind of bomb to go off
with all sorts of fears and neurosis about it,
none of which has actually happened.
And you now feel it seems to me a great sense of liberation.
That's, yes, very accurate.
Absolutely, yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you.
That's got to be a good feeling, isn't it?
It's a great feeling.
It's any time like those stories that I write, usually to start every day about how everything's, you know, what the results are going to be, even before I engage or encounter anything, none of the stories are ever true.
And I keep writing the stories.
It's wasted energy.
It's wasted time.
But, yeah, it's like one day, one day, you know, we'll sit down.
What are we averaging?
Like once every...
Every eight years.
Ten years?
Yeah.
Every eight years.
Let's shorten that.
Can we shorten that?
I'd love to.
Yeah.
I'd love to.
Okay.
So if I see you again in six months or a year,
the stories are...
I'm not going to say they've stopped being written,
but they won't be as...
consistently in the mix.
How about that?
I get it.
I get it.
I would love that, Charlie.
How have the people in your life reacted to all of this coming out?
And I'm particularly talking about your kids, you know, maybe your ex-wife, Denise, who's
very loving about you in the documentary.
Your dad, Martin Sheen, obviously, you play my favorite ever president in the West Wing,
my favorite ever show.
How have the family in your life reacted to all this coming out?
the way that you've told it. It's incredible. It's all love. It's all just like, yeah, there's nothing
awkward about it. There's no, you know, hey, when the kids are in the other room, can we just,
can we, can we, can we talk? There's none on that. There's none of that. But it's interesting.
So my son, Max, who's 16, lives with me, right? And his brother Bob's in Florida, but he's coming back.
It's this thing with my kids, they, you know, they're kind of cycle in and out and, you know,
one mom's over there, she's over there, and then she's everybody, she keeps rotating, so it's pretty cool.
But Max, he, him and his friend Natan, watch the doc, and they reported back on episode one.
And they were like, Dad, this is awesome.
Oh, my God, wow, what a life, what a thing.
It's like, he's like, I'm so proud of you.
And then, so that's episode one.
And I know, like, you know, all the good stuff in episode two.
And I'm kind of waiting.
I'm kind of waiting.
And then, I don't know, two hours later, Max writes and he says,
wow, Dad, episode two is even better.
And then I'm like, wow, thank you, thank you.
And there was no, there's, but there's going, there has to be,
at some moment when we're in the car going to school, the market,
there has to be a thing where, hey, so, Max, you know, that stuff with the thing,
with the crack and the guys and the, you know, and I'm just, I just kind of need to have that
moment with him so he knows it's not something that is not to be discussed or is taboo or
creates a thing between us or, yeah, just so, I guess in stages, but he loved it,
so I guess he's just open to discuss any part of episode two.
You know.
How has your dad reacted?
Because you're talking there very movingly, actually, about being a father.
I mean, the responsibilities that brings.
You put your dad through a bit of a roller coaster over the decades.
I mean, he must be thrilled to see you today.
But what's he made of you coming out, telling everything the way you've told it?
He just, he hasn't broken it down,
specifically and, you know, like spoken to things.
But he's he's, he's, he's super proud of, of the courage and the honesty.
And, you know, just that I decided that it was just, it was time to, you know,
if this was how, what I needed to do to move forward.
Yeah.
If this was, you know, I don't know if it's a comeback.
I see it kind of as a reset, you know.
I think he just he trusts in the choices I've made and in and around this whole process that he's any and he just keeps applauding my endeavors.
He read the book in he read the book in like a day and a half while I was recording the audiobook.
And I recorded the audio book at his house.
And so because a lot of the stories are being told on the actual property.
before that guest house existed, like, as children.
And it was really cool to do it at Ground Zero, you know?
Yeah.
But so I'm like, I got four days to record the audiobook, so we're on the clock.
So I'm running up to the house to, you know, get coffee or a snack and then run back.
And he's reading the book.
And he's like, hey, hey, hey, we got to talk about this thing.
He said, this is, he says, kid, this is the most unique book that I've ever read.
My dad's read a lot of books.
And so that was like, that was really inspiring.
Yeah.
really compliment you.
That was a great moment.
Yeah.
But we're in such a rush to get this thing on tape.
He's reading it and wanting to talk about it when we are like literally running out of precious minutes and hours to complete it.
So that was the dynamic that was going on.
Fascinating.
And no, it was, it was a lovely experience.
Yeah.
You were on air with Joe Rogan last.
week when the horrific news came that Charlie Kirk had been killed and I just want to show a
little clip of this happening because it was literally happening in real time as you were doing your
regular interviews take a look this just happened we just found out that Charlie Kirk got shot
it's fucking awful and is he dead that's what was just one of the guys out there just said
spoken in the lobby was just I was looking I've been looking I haven't seen anything that's
confirmed.
Whoa.
Murder for having a different opinion from somebody else.
Yeah.
Different ideology from somebody else.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know.
Beliefs that didn't align.
Yeah.
I'm sorry?
Rest in peace.
Fuck.
You know, an extraordinary moment, really, an horrific moment.
What do you feel about this, Charlie?
That somebody would be executed like that, basically for having,
opinion someone didn't like?
I first thought about his fatherless children, his wife instantly widow.
So I didn't care about the politics or any of the social aspects, cultural aspects.
At first, I immediately thought just in the family dynamic and component and the value of what was just ripped.
from all of them forever in a in a in a in a picosecond and it was yeah it was Joe and I just trying to kind
of keep some measure of just keep our wits and sensibilities about us processing this and
then you know we're discussing the JFK assassination earlier in that same interview and
And, yeah, I, I'm glad if I, if I, if that moment had to happen, the moment happened and I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, being with Rogan for the aftermath of it, um, was helpful.
Yeah.
Yeah. If that, if that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah. But, and I just, you know, I don't know, I think for this generation, um, I, I,
I think that's their JFK moment.
I mean, seriously.
And I just, you know,
if that's where we've,
if that's where we've wound up,
it cannot be where we stay.
Right.
You know?
Yeah, no, that's, that's, it's still,
it's still, I don't want to say,
it's still not,
it just still doesn't feel,
it's too surreal to,
to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to,
Yeah, you know.
Yeah.
It's just the unfairness of it, the unfairness of it.
Because that dude, like, brought, he brought, he didn't demean people.
He didn't ridicule people.
He didn't belittle or embarrass or got you.
He showed up, you know, as prepared as you could have been, as passionate as you could have been,
and just asked people to just have an open debate.
Just, okay, here's what I believe and here's why.
And let's hear your side of it.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And that it turned into that is just, that's, that just can't be,
you know, we can't keep, we can't keep having days like that moving forward.
No.
Do you think we've lost the ability?
to have just honest, free, democratic debate with each other?
And is social media a large part of that problem, do you think?
I mean, you can't, yeah, I mean, it's, it's, you, I don't know that we've lost the ability
completely, but we've arrived at a place for it, it just, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's
solution anymore, you know?
That doesn't mean it's not available on both sides to, you know,
sensibly try to, you know, reach some, I don't know,
there's a reason that the term, you know, agree to disagree exists, right?
Yes, yes.
But I just, I got to have more faith in just the human experience.
I have to have more faith.
Even if, you know, even if I'm buying into a lie at that point, that's okay.
That's what I have to go with.
Yeah.
Just for the sake of hope.
Hope, you know?
Yeah.
You know, talking of hope, Charlie, I want to end on a really hopeful, happy note.
Because like I said at the start, you look great.
Awesome.
I've loved catching up with you.
I always love catching out with you.
But I've never seen you actually this chilled, this happy, this healthy looking.
And it begs the question, because before all the moment,
madness. You were such a brilliant
actor. You're still a brilliant actor.
Are we going to see you back
acting in
something significant, a big movie,
a big TV series?
Is this now, you know,
whatever, mind the reset. Are we going to see
the comeback? Because I'd love
to see it. I think so.
I thank you. And thank you
for those lovely words.
Yeah.
If
if
it was going to happen again,
And like, I think now is the time.
I think the planets are realigned.
And the good news is I don't have any, like, breaking news of a project or anything like that.
But the material I'm reading again is the best that I've put my eyes on in over 20 years.
And so it's really cool that now I'm being seen again through that lens that, oh, yeah, okay.
This is the guy that, yeah, okay.
So that's exciting.
And I can start to feel kind of the good adrenal fear of like something showing up that's going to be really challenging.
You know, that project where you're just like, I, the reason I'm, the reason I'm going to do this because I'm not sure I can do it, stuff like that.
You know, so that's, and I haven't felt that in decades.
And so, yeah, that's exciting.
That's exciting.
And you're 60 now, right?
I am, yes.
Yeah, that happened.
So are I.
But, oh, congratulations.
We both are.
So are you 65?
Are you 65?
Yes, March the 30th, 1965, I was born.
Amazing, right on.
Where were you?
Yeah.
65 is a kick-ass year, right?
But, but did you discover as well that the...
What's your birthday, Charlie?
September 3rd.
Right.
September 3rd.
So you're actually, you're younger than me.
Yeah, like that much, yeah.
But did you find, did you find pairs, I'm sorry?
You look younger than me.
I'm giving you a compliment.
Oh, that's debatable.
That is open for debate.
But thank you.
I found that the road, that the road to 60 was a lot bumpier than just being 60.
Yes.
60 shows up, showed up, and I was like, oh, cool, Wednesday.
You know, there was like no, suddenly all the worry, all the bigness of it just was not.
It was like, cool, all right.
Because it's going to happen whether we embrace it or not, right?
100%.
But, yeah, I'm excited for whatever's next.
So am I, Charlie.
It's been great catching up with you.
Thank you so much for doing another interview.
I love them.
when we do them.
Absolute pleasure.
Absolute pleasure.
Thank you.
The book is The Book of Sheen, the documentaries,
aka Charlie Sheen on Netflix.
They're both brilliant.
I urge everyone to watch them.
And I can't wait to see what you do,
because I think there are going to be loads of people,
looking at you, seeing the success of the book and the series,
and they're going to be flooding to you with offers,
and you're going to do something great,
and you're going to be back on top of that pile again.
And it's going to be amazing to watch.
That's amazing.
That's amazing.
Well, I'm going to hitch my wagon.
to your wave of optimism.
So thank you.
Thank you, Pierce.
Charlie, great to see you, mate.
Take care.
All the best.
Likewise.
Right on.
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