Sheen draws record viewers for “Men” and TV roast

Dead or alive, Charlie Sheen ruled the TV airwaves on Monday, pulling in record audiences for his Comedy Central roast and more than 28 million Americans to his “Two and A Half Men” TV funeral.Some 28.7 million watched CBS bury Sheen’s wayward TV character Charlie Harper and introduce new star Ashton Kutcher in an all-time series high audience for the lucrative comedy, according to updated figures from research company Nielsen.

And after months of headlines following Sheen’s bitter exit from the most-watched comedy on U.S. TV, 6.4 million people watched his sex life, drug use and recent career meltdown draw laughter on Comedy Central’s TV roast by fellow celebrities including “Jackass” stuntman Steve-0 and boxer Mike Tyson.

Comedy Central said Sheen’s was its most-watched roast ever, while the audience for “Two and A Half Men” was more than double that of last year’s season opener and bigger than any episode in the show’s first eight seasons with Sheen in the starring role.

Monday’s season premiere of “Two and A Half Men” crushed the opening of “Dancing With the Stars” on rival ABC despite a celebrity cast that gave viewers their first glimpse of the ballroom contest’s first transgender contestant, Chaz Bono, and TV legal analyst Nancy Grace both doing the cha cha.

Nielsen figures showed that 18.6 million people watched the season premiere of “Dancing with the Stars” — a 24 percent drop from last year’s opening show.

Reviews for Kutcher’s debut on “Two and a Half Men,” playing a heartbroken Internet billionaire with a penchant for walking around nude, were kind and suggested that the series — a cash cow for both CBS and program makers Warner Bros television — was far from dead.

“Kutcher’s performance was good, nearly as poker-faced fine as Sheen’s was … Kutcher will probably prove just as skilled,” wrote Entertainment Weekly‘s Ken Tucker.

TV Guide‘s Matt Roush said that judging by first impressions the revamped “Men” will “will survive both Charlies just fine for at least a little while longer.”

The Los Angeles Times called the premiere “a promising beginning” adding that “Kutcher brings a softness to a series that could be brittle and sour, misanthropic and misogynistic, and temperamentally middle-aged.”

Sheen was the highest-paid actor on U.S. television before being fired in March after an insulting tirade against the show’s creators and producers that followed months of partying and attempts at rehab.

Sheen and Warner Bros are said to be close to a settlement of the actor’s $100 million lawsuit over his firing. Sheen has also made a number of contrite appearances in the past week, including delivering an awkward mea culpa at the Primetime Emmy Awards show on Sunday.

 

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – By Jill Serjeant(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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