
"Sheen comes across as a bit glib about all the destruction and headaches he wrought in The Book of Sheen. Written in a very bad-boy, sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll tone, the book fills its pages with stories of paid-sex encounters, benders lasting so long that the thought how his house smells makes you mentally gag, and assertions of innocence. Sheen mostly glosses over discussions about his most glaring allegations of wrongdoing throughout the 350-page roller coaster that spends an inordinate amount of time on his"
"That year, CBS decided to finally fire the actor from America's then-most-watched sitcom after turning a blind eye to his well-documented involvement in a sex ring, domestic-abuse charges, substance-use issues, and overall sleazy behavior. Sheen took the boot and swung a machete around on a rooftop to the tune of a million Twitter followers in a day and die-hard fans cheering his meltdown one-man shows."
Charlie Sheen recounts the events leading to his 2011 public flameout, positioning himself amid allegations and chaotic behavior. CBS fired him in 2011 after long-documented involvement in a sex ring, domestic-abuse charges, substance-use issues, and pervasive sleazy behavior. Sheen narrates paid-sex encounters, prolonged benders, and insistence on his innocence while largely glossing over major allegations. The narrative dwells on his fictionalized Vietnam-film obsessions, baseball metaphors, and a childhood ping-pong loss to O.J. Simpson. A companion documentary appears on Netflix September 10. The tone leans bad-boy, sex-and-drugs bravado, mixing self-justification with glib reminiscence.
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