Charlie Sheen recalls Jon Cryer in public collapse

Charlie Sheen Responding to a candid interview Jon Claire In a new documentary about his life.
Wednesday, September 3, 60-year-old Sheen tells about his scandal in a doctor Also known as Charlie SheenThis is his debut on September 10 the next day after his memoir Book of Sheenhit the bookshelf.
Cryer, starring with Sheen from the CBS sitcom Two and a half menparticipated in the movie with the creators of the show Chuck Lorreand shiny exes Brooke Mueller and Denise Richards.
“The news I heard was really cool [Cryer’s] Opinion,” Sheen said in an interview people Published Wednesday. “He was caught in all the stupid attitudes and it was affecting him, his family and his career and all of that. I can’t argue what he said.”
Sheen told the media that Cryer’s advice was that impostor syndrome exacerbated his substance abuse.
“He nailed the nail and I was glad he opened that door because it gave me the opportunity to really start thinking about it,” Sheen said. “He said, ‘He was a guy who didn’t believe what he deserved, or what he earned, ‘I was like, ‘Wow.
Sheen added: “Suddenly, I felt like I was on the couch in Jon’s therapy office and he died. It was a feeling I felt for my whole life because I didn’t have formal training. I didn’t have formal training. I didn’t have formal education. I didn’t even finish high school. Suddenly I was working and traveling. Can.”
Sheen praised Cryer’s “informative” and “compassionate” observations.
Actor appears in the first eight seasons in 60-year-old Cryer Two and a half menbefore he left the show in 2011, fell in the spiral of addiction and behavioral instability. His character was killed, CBS installed Ashton Kutcher To fill in the opposite weeper, until the series ended in 2015. Sheen has been sober since 2017, according to reports.
“I’m sorry,” Sheen said of his Two and a half men leave. “I think if I hadn’t done what I had, I might have lived a different life right now. None of my problems are what they look like. But you just don’t know.”
Cryer admitted in the doctor that he was nervous about discussing Sheen openly and risked his anger from his former Costar.
“I think he has a reason to feel that way, because that’s a historical pattern, but it’s not the case today,” Sheen said.
Sheen said Cryer was “the only person I didn’t attend Doc in person” because he “had no numbers that fit him.” Film director, Andrew RenziRepresentative Sheen talked to Cryer, who then wrote to Cryer and said, “Hey, thank you for your contribution, sorry, we didn’t contact you in person. I hope to see you around campus.”
Sheen told people The crying man hasn’t responded to his notes, which is “not like Jon”. Sheen called him “a super responsibility like this.