CHARLIE SHEEN FOR PRESIDENT

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Charlie Sheen Debuts Sheen's Korner and a "Winning" Tattoo



TV Guide - March 6, 2011 4:53 AM PST

Charlie Sheen launched his Internet talk show Sheen's Korner Saturday, and one thing's for sure: He thought it was winning.

"You're either in Sheen's corner or you're with the trolls," Sheen said at the start of Sheen's Korner, reciting the show's tagline.

Charlie Sheen: Life with "goddesses" is "perfect"

Broadcasting on Ustream with his buddies and one of his goddesses, Sheen kicked things off by unveiling his new left wrist tattoo that said what else? "Winning."

He then launched into several segments, including "Winning News," about regular ol' folks "winning;""Weighing in with Rick," in which viewers tweeted thoughts to Sheen's assistant; "Wish They Were Like Me Forever," which zinged Dr. Drew and Nancy Grace; and "Kind of Wish I Was Like Them for 10 Minutes," which named Colin Farrell, San Francisco Giants' Brian Wilson and Sean Penn as those with whom Sheen would temporarily like to swap lives.

Les Moonves hopes Two and a Half Men returns; breaks silence on Charlie Sheen

Sheen and his friends laughed and rambled during much of the program. Throughout the show, Sheen repeatedly quoted phrases from the interviews he gave to ABC and NBC earlier this week during his media tour.

Sheen, who wore a hat and a black T-shirt adorned with a green dollar sign, closed the 50-minute show by reading an original poem. He also teased that Sheen's Korner would be a weekly or nightly show depending on viewer response.

The show peaked with more than 115,000 viewers at one point, but dipped below 90,000 by the end.

Click here to watch a replay of the show. Do you think Sheen should continue doing "Sheen's Korner"?

Sheen files: A crazy week for NBC's Jeff Rossen



FILE - In a Aug. 2, 2010 file photo, Charlie Sheen waves as he arrives at the Pitkin County Courthouse in Aspen, Colo., for a hearing in his domestic abuse case. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)Associated Press


NEW YORK - Here's something for Jeff Rossen to ponder after a crazy week: Is being called a "rock star" by Charlie Sheen good or bad for his career in television journalism?

Rossen, an NBC News correspondent who works chiefly for the "Today" show, played a prominent role in the actor's bizarre media tour to bash his bosses for suspending "Two and a Half Men," and explain a lifestyle of drugs and "goddesses." Andrea Canning of ABC News, CNN's Piers Morgan and radio star Howard Stern also spent extensive time with Sheen.

It was Rossen, however, whom Sheen later described as a "rock star" whose interview was "pure gold." Sheen told Morgan live on CNN that Rossen was awesome and should be a guest on his show.

"I think what he meant by calling me a rock star is that I kept my word to him," said Rossen, who joined NBC News in 2008 after working for seven years at ABC's New York City station.

Rossen had been trying to get Sheen to come on the "Today" show since shortly after the actor trashed a room in New York's Plaza Hotel last fall. He said he spoke frequently with Sheen's management team and met the actor on the "Two and a Half Men" set in November. Sheen subsequently spoke to Rossen for background on other stories, but didn't go on camera until last weekend.

Besides taped interviews that appeared on "Today" Monday and Tuesday of last week, Rossen convinced the actor to get up — or stay up — for a 4:30 a.m. PT live interview the morning after he lost custody of his twins.

Rossen didn't pull punches. He asked Sheen about his drug use and whether he provided a healthy home environment for his children and his role in making the future of television's most popular sitcom shaky.

"I told him from the very beginning (that) I'll make no agreements," Rossen said. "I'm going to ask you whatever I want to ask you. The questions will be tough. Sometimes they will be uncomfortable. What I promise to you in return is that I will keep your answers in context. I'm not going to have any clever, tricky endings. I'm going to let you explain."

Rossen's boss, "Today" show executive producer Jim Bell, called him a versatile and relentless reporter.

"Literal and figurative doors were slammed in his face along the way but he simply wouldn't take 'no' for an answer," Bell said. "His work on this story is consistent with the many stories he covers for 'Today,' from comprehensive investigative pieces to breaking news."

Sheen's interviews were a brilliant piece of performance art or evidence he's off his rocker, or some combination of the two. He probably set a record for inserting more catchphrases into the public lexicon in the shortest amount of time. The more he talked, the sadder it became.

Rossen said Sheen told him that he wanted to upstage the Academy Awards.

Is he nuts? "It's tough to tell," Rossen said.

"I've been given a very limited snapshot of Charlie Sheen," Rossen said. "I've spent about 10 hours with him over the course of several days, sometimes with cameras and sometimes without cameras. You can't judge a person fully on the basis of 10 hours. I would hope nobody would judge me that way."

Clearly, Sheen is at a crossroads in his life and struggling with that, he said.

How much the "rock star" line sticks with Rossen is an interesting question. Journalists usually look with suspicion at praise from interview subjects, perhaps seeing it as evidence that not enough tough questions were asked.

"It makes me uncomfortable," said Suzanne Lysak, a professor of broadcasting at Rossen's alma mater, Syracuse University. "But this whole situation is just so crazy."

The more important issue is the media's role in giving Sheen a platform. James Rainey of The Los Angeles Times wrote that news outlets are Sheen enablers and, in the case of ABC and NBC, "aiding and abetting the epic meltdown of a celebrity who happens to be the biggest star on the biggest comedy hit at rival CBS."

Networks have swiftly responded to the market. Morgan's interview with Sheen did so well in the ratings CNN reran it Friday. After Canning's "20/20" interview proved a big draw, Rossen put together a "Dateline NBC" special Friday. Celebrity substance abuse expert Dr. Drew Pinsky is doing a VH1 special on Sheen and even Spike TV can't resist, ordering a countdown of Sheen's most outlandish moments illustrated with Taiwanese animation... (READ MORE...)

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Charlie Sheen to get animated special on Spike TV Reuters




March 4, 2011 9:00 PM PST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Charlie Sheen will get an animated special on U.S. cable network Spike TV.

"Charlie Sheen's Winningest Moments" will premiere March 9 at 10:30 p.m. ET, the network announced Friday.

The half-hour special will be re-created through Taiwanese animation company, Next Media Animation, which has chronicled a number of celebrity breakdowns in online spoofs.

The show will count down 10 to 12 of Sheen's most outlandish moments, including:
...(READ MORE...)

Charlie Sheen, Deconstructed - The New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/06/weekinreview/06sheenology.html?src=twrhp


Published: March 5, 2011

The Meta-Joke

On “The Late Late Show,” the host, Craig Ferguson, rather than simply not make jokes at Charlie Sheen’s expense, announced his decision to not make jokes at Mr. Sheen’s expense (and inadvertently got a laugh in the process).

There was a mental hospital in London, it’s been there for a very long time. It started as a priory in I think the 12th or 13th century. Anyway, it’s called Bedlam. And what happened was, in the 18th century, people used to go along and pay money — they would pay a penny — and they would look through the peepholes of the cells. And they would look at the lunatics and they would laugh at them. ...

So I’m looking at the Charlie Sheen thing unfold, and I’m thinking “Aw, man!” [Applause, laughter] No, no, no, no, no.

The Meta-Theory

Jacob Weisberg explained in Slate that he is not particularly interested in celebrities like Mr. Sheen — but that he is “extremely interested in why other people are so interested in them.” He entertained several different theories of celebrity fascination.

Finally, celebrity obsession may simply be economically rational activity in the sense that everyone involved in the value chain — celebrities, agents, producers, paparazzi, publishers, etc. — makes more money than they would otherwise. Celebrity “journalism” is not only diabolically popular but cheap to produce, which explains why People is America’s most profitable magazine. ... Charlie Sheen may not get $10 million for his memoirs, but they’re worth more than they were this time last year. It does not seem impossible that his “breakdown” has been entirely calculated.

The Meta-Hand-Wringing

On New York magazine’s Vulture blog, Willa Paskin posted “The Argument You’re Having With Yourself About Charlie Sheen,” a mock monologue that purports to “trace the Möbius strip of what happens in the human brain when it really thinks about Charlie Sheen.”

Ha, Charlie Sheen is so crazy! Look at him, talking about warlocks and tiger blood and octagons! ...

But when people are on drugs, or having mental-health problems, they are good at saying crazy things. ...

If he’s going to talk to basically anyone with a pulse and a recording device in such a highly entertaining fashion, what’s the harm in being entertained? ...

But what’s really entertaining us? ... Face it, this is a guy who could die. Just look at him!

You’re taking this way too seriously. He’s not going to die. I totally have him in my celebrity death pool just in case, though.

But don’t you see how cynical that is?

What is wrong with being cynical about Charlie Sheen? ...

I’m sorry, but aren’t you starting to maybe like him a little?

No. No. I’m laughing at him. Well, I’m pretty sure I’m just laughing at him.

The Meta-Media

On the New York Times Magazine’s blog, Adam Sternbergh weighed in on the media cycle of weighing in on Mr. Sheen.

If you’ve been following the Charlie Sheen Self-Immolation World Tour 2011 ... you’ve noticed that we are now in Defcon Three of Celebrity Scandal: The “Whither Society” portion of the meltdown. Defcon Five is the scandal itself. Defcon Four is the all-of-us-watching-with-mouths-agape phase. With Defcon Three comes the clothes-rending: Are we enablers? Should we be egging him on? Is this actually news? And most worrying of all: why do we care?...(READ MORE...)

CHARLIE SHEEN for PRESIDENT