Charlie Sheen says he’s grateful that his former Two and a Half Men costar Jon Cryer agreed to appear in his upcoming Netflix documentary.
The 60-year-old actor looks back on his turbulent past in the two-part special titled aka Charlie Sheen, which covers everything from his rise in Hollywood to the infamous 2011 drug-fueled meltdown that got him fired from the hit CBS sitcom and replaced by Ashton Kutcher.
The fallout at the time drove a major wedge between Sheen, Cryer, and show creator Chuck Lorre — leaving Cryer and Lorre to pick up the pieces as the show was thrown into chaos.
Though Sheen and Lorre have since patched things up, things with Cryer remain distant — with the actor telling Bill Maher’s podcast in January that he has ‘no relationship’ with Sheen.
Still, the actor took part in the doc and offered his perspective on the collapse of Two and a Half Men.
In a new interview, Sheen, who has been sober for eight years, admitted he understands why Cryer would still feel upset, given how his past addictions blew up their hit show.

Charlie Sheen s ays he’s grateful that his former Two and a Half Men costar Jon Cryer agreed to appear in his upcoming Netflix documentary; (seen in 2019)

The 60-year-old actor looks back on his turbulent past in the two-part special titled aka Charlie Sheen, which covers everything from his rise in Hollywood to the infamous 2011 drug-fueled meltdown that got him fired from the hit CBS sitcom and replaced by Ashton Kutcher
‘It was really cool to hear from his perspective,’ Sheen told People. ‘He was in the line of fire with all that stupid s— going on, and it was affecting him and his family and his career and all that. I can’t debate anything that he said.’
Sheen added that Cryer’s words were thoughtful, and he even reached out to thank him — but has yet to hear back.
‘I’m thinking I wrote to the wrong number. It’s not like Jon to not respond. He’s super responsible like that,’ Sheen said.
‘So if you’re reading this, Jon, DM me your new number!’
During the January episode of his Club Random podcast, Maher asked Cryer point-blank, ‘What’s your relationship with Charlie now?’
Cryer replied, ‘I don’t know. We don’t have a relationship anymore.’
He went on to note that Sheen and Lorre have since reconciled, with Sheen even making guest appearances on Lorre’s Max comedy Bookie.
Sheen and Lorre hadn’t spoken in over a decade after the falling out, which began in 2011 after Sheen called Lorre ‘stupid’ and ‘little maggot’ in a series of well-publicized tirades.

The fallout at the time drove a major wedge between Sheen, Cryer, and show creator Chuck Lorre — leaving Cryer and Lorre to pick up the pieces as the show was thrown into chaos.

Though Sheen and Lorre have since patched things up, things with Cryer remain distant — with the actor telling Bill Maher’s podcast in January that he has ‘no relationship’ with Sheen; (Cryer in 2025)
As for Lorre, he previously gushed about reuniting with his old pal for the show Bookie.
‘I don’t want to be too mawkish about it, but it was healing,’ Lorre said in 2024.
‘I was nervous, but almost as soon as we started talking, I remembered, we were friends once,’ the writer/director explained. ‘And that friendship just suddenly seemed to be there again.’
Lorre said he got to a place where their feud is now considered ‘old news’.
‘I loved working with Charlie on ‘Two and a Half Men’, Lorre added. ‘We did 170 episodes together before it all fell apart.’
In 2021, Sheen admitted that there were ’55 different’ and better ways to have handled his firing from the hit CBS sitcom that did not include calling Lorre names like a ‘turd’ or ‘clown.’
‘I think the growth for me post-meltdown or melt forward or melt somewhere — however you want to label it — it has to start with absolute ownership of my role in all of it,’ he told Yahoo! News. ‘And it was desperately juvenile.’
In 2018, Sheen took responsibility over their dramatic falling out and expressed a desire to repair their relationship during an interview with Today Show.

‘It was really cool to hear from his perspective,’ Sheen told People . ‘He was in the line of fire with all that stupid s— going on, and it was affecting him and his family and his career and all that. I can’t debate anything that he said’
At the time, the father-of-five ‘really’ wanted ‘to mend’ things with Lorre.
‘He lives close by, I could easily go by and just drop a note under his door with my phone number, which I should, and I will.’
Speaking about a possible reboot of the comedy series that made him the highest paid actor on American TV, he said he was open to the idea, ‘it would be so cool to reboot it.’
Lorre previously admitted that ‘there were a couple of years’ where he ‘couldn’t watch’ Two and a Half Men because it ‘was too hurtful.’