Charlie Sheen may not get quite the audience he wanted for his $100 million lawsuit over his firing from “Two and a Half Men” – a judge on Wednesday ruled that an arbitrator should determine whether the case is handled privately or in a public courtroom.

Sheen’s contract with Warner Bros. Television has a valid clause requiring the private arbitrator to decide how the case proceeds, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Allan Goodman wrote in a 21-page ruling. The decision will likely dampen publicity about the case in the short-term, although Sheen’s attorney said he will still argue the case should be heard publicly.

Sheen sued Warner Bros. and “Men” executive producer Chuck Lorre on March 10, days after Sheen was fired from his starring role on television’s top-rated comedy.

Goodman ruled that Lorre also has a valid clause in his contract with Warner Bros. to have disputes handled through arbitration.

Warner Bros. and Lorre both want the case handled privately. Sheen opposed those efforts in court filings and an all-day hearing on the issue in April.

Attorney Marty Singer, who is representing Sheen, said the ruling does not decide whether the case will be heard privately and he will argue that it should be handled in the public court system. He said Sheen had valid claims in his lawsuit and the studio was holding back at least $10 million in royalties on reruns and sales of the show.

Warner Bros. and Lorre’s attorney welcomed the ruling Wednesday and said it was the correct one given Sheen’s contract.

“This matter will now proceed in an orderly fashion as the parties agreed to,” Lorre’s attorney Howard Weitzman wrote in an email.

“We’re very gratified by the court’s ruling enforcing the parties’ arbitration agreement,” Warner Bros. said in a statement.

Sheen sued in March, claiming they breached his contract and halted work on “Two and a Half Men” to punish Sheen for a pair of hospitalizations and comments in which he attacked Lorre personally in a series of highly-publicized interviews. He also claimed the studio was trying to cut him out of royalties he is owed for the broadcast of reruns and DVD sales.

“Two and a Half Men,” which debuted in 2003, starred Sheen as womanizing bachelor Charlie Harper, who creates an ad hoc family with his neurotic brother, the divorced Alan (Jon Cryer) and Alan’s son, Jake (Angus T. Jones).

It has been television’s top-rated comedy and reruns frequently air, although the long-term prospects of the show are unclear.

Goodman has asked the parties to update him on the status of arbitration by Nov. 30.

 

The former couple – who have two daughters, Lola, six, and seven-year Sammy, together – ended their marriage in 2006 and although Denise claims they once shared a “beautiful love story” she admits it all descended into bitterness at the end.

Explaining her decision to write a memoir – which is being released next month – Denise has said she wanted to reveal what it was like to “struggle” through the divorce because “we had one of the worst divorces so if we get into a good place, that’s great”.

Speaking at the Time for Heroes Celebrity Carnival Sponsored by Disney to Benefit the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, she added: “People have only gotten the rotten stuff so, you know, there was a beautiful love story between he and I and I know that it went the way it went, but I talk more about how I felt during that time because I feel like a lot of women can relate to that, going through a divorce and custody and being a single parent and trying to work and all of that stuff”.

While Denise, 40, has tried to protect the couple’s kids from hearing about their acrimonious divorce and their father’s recent troubles – including being fired from sitcom ‘Two and a Half Men’ after a public spat with show creator Chuck Lorre and stints in rehab to be treated for drug abuse – she is worried that won’t be possible as they get older.

She said: “They are in kindergarten and first grade so, so far they are okay, but I don’t know because that could change as kids get older and more aware. But today we are good.”

 

Lawyers for the pair told a judge in Los Angeles today they have managed to come to an agreement over two-year-old twins Bob and Max, which will see them share legal and physical custody of the kids.

According to TMZ, Brooke will get more time with the children then her former husband although the signed agreement will not be filed in court in order to keep the terms completely confidential.

The deal comes less than a month after Charlie slammed the judge who refused to award him sole access to the boys.

He said: “I thought it was a s**t sandwich. Two slices of bread filled with s**t. Seemed like there were rules in place and it seemed like someone didn’t follow them. And there’s no consequences, so I don’t get it. System is broke, you know.”

This truce with Brooke will provide some good news for Charlie , who recently failed in a bid to get increased access to his daughters Sam, seven, and Lola, five, with ex-wife Denise Richards.

A source said: “Denise wants Charlie to be healthy. She wants the girls to see him, but he has to change.
“This is up to Charlie. If he wants to be a dad, he can be. But he has to prove he’s healthy and has his life in order.”

 

The former ‘Two and a Half Men’ star – who infamously set up home with two ‘goddesses’, Natalie Kenly and Bree Olson, earlier this year – has reportedly been approached by Establishedmen.com to front a forthcoming marketing campaign for their service, which matches rich men with “needy” women.

According to gossip website TMZ, the company is also keen to install Charlie as their president, which would see him in charge of promotions, advertisements and sales.

Charlie – who is currently seeking a new goddess after being dumped by Bree – is believed to have a clause written in his contract that ensures he does not face the sack for rude outbursts.

Meanwhile, it has emerged that the actor could still receive $2 million per episode of ‘Two and a Half Men’, despite being sacked from the show due to his erratic behavior.

A source said: “It’s good news for Charlie. Under his contract, he gets paid for every episode produced, whether he’s in it or not.”

It was revealed earlier this month that Ashton Kutcher is to take the lead role in the sitcom, which is expected to return to TV later this year.

 

Ashton Kutcher? Seriously?

With Friday’s announcement that Kutcher will be replacing Charlie Sheen, viewers could begin to wonder how he will be plugged into the hit sitcom’s tight little world. Can his particular appeal fill the void of the caustically droll Sheen? And just who the heck will his character be?

Neither CBS nor Chuck Lorre, the series’ creator, were giving any hints as they confirmed the deal to bring Kutcher into a show where Sheen’s character was the comic center, portraying an advertising jingle writer with a playboy lifestyle and an overwrought brother.

Kutcher, who first found sitcom stardom more than a decade ago on “That `70s Show,” specializes in puppy dog wholesomeness and laid-back, goofy sexiness. He’s perhaps the anti-Sheen.

“We are so lucky to have someone as talented, joyful and just plain remarkable as Ashton joining our family,” said Lorre, also the show’s executive producer. “Added to that is the deep sigh of relief knowing that our family stays together. If I was any happier, it’d be illegal.”

“I can’t replace Charlie Sheen,” said Kutcher, adding that he plans to work hard “to entertain the hell out of people.”

Kutcher’s quote was the news release’s sole mention of Sheen, who, two months ago, was fired by Warner Bros. Television when it cut short production of the show’s eighth season following Sheen’s public implosion through hard partying and angry criticism of Lorre.

The character that Sheen had played until then drew comic inspiration from his own life of sex sprees, serial marriages and substance abuse.

That character, named Charlie Harper, had started with a bang.

“I make a lot of money for doing very little work,” he boasted on the show’s premiere in 2003. “I sleep with beautiful women who don’t ask about my feelings. I drive a Jag. I live at the beach.”

Charlie was speaking to his dweebish, high-strung chiropractor brother, Alan (Jon Cryer), whose wife had just thrown him out of the house. Alan and his son, Jake (Angus T. Jones), had crashed with Charlie. There they stayed.

The gist of “Men” lay in the disparity between Charlie’s life of plenty and Alan’s frustrated existence.

“My life is pathetic,” Alan moaned on an episode this season. “On the other hand, Charlie’s life is great.”

But now Charlie is gone, and, with him, the show’s dependably winning formula.

The deal to replace him with Kutcher apparently came together quickly, following reports this week that negotiations with film actor Hugh Grant to join the show had fallen through. A deadline on deciding whether the show would continue was looming, with CBS set to unveil its fall schedule to advertisers in New York next Wednesday.

Besides “That `70s Show,” Kutcher’s credits include film roles like the romantic comedy “No Strings Attached” and his producing and hosting roles for the prank show “Punk’d.”

Kutcher is not as well-known as Sheen but, at age 33, is a dozen years younger and has a huge flock of fans who check in on his every utterance on Twitter.

It was on Twitter, of course, where on Thursday Kutcher gave his followers a sly clue for what was coming.

“What’s the square root of 6.25?” the actor asked in a tweet.

The answer is 2 1/2.

Once the news was out Friday, Sheen was tossing around numbers, too.

“Enjoy the show, America,” he said in a statement. “Enjoy seeing a 2.0 in the demo every Monday, WB.”

Sheen used TV lingo to predict failure for the revamped “Men.” He referred to a 2.0 Nielsen Co. rating among the 18- to 49-year-old demographic that advertisers often seek. This season, “Two and a Half Men” averaged a 4.1 rating in that group.

Actually, Kutcher might be expected to have a younger following than Sheen and one that could be curious about his new role. The difficulty might be the older makeup of CBS’ audience in general, more Sheen’s crowd than Kutcher’s.

Sheen, in his statement, advised Kutcher to “Enjoy planet Chuck. … There is no air, laughter, loyalty or love there.” That’s a reference to his feud with former boss Lorre, which has hardly abated since his sacking.

And it had to serve as a reminder to Lorre that, amid many unanswered questions, one thing is already clear: with Kutcher, the “Two and a Half Men” set will be a much more peaceful place.

Will it be as funny? What do you think?

 

Actor Charlie Sheen toured an Alabama neighborhood leveled by tornadoes and said Monday he wants to organize a relief event for victims in the state.

After going through the decimated Alberta neighborhood in Tuscaloosa, Sheen told The Associated Press he was working with local officials to organize a benefit. He said a date has not been set.

“I want some money, hope, faith and healing to the area,” said Sheen, the former star of the sitcom “Two and a Half Men.”

Sheen was fired from the show in March and has been in a bitter dispute with executive producer Chuck Lorre and Warner Bros. Television. Since then, he’s launched a stage tour that has captured attention.

The actor, wearing a University of Alabama baseball cap, said he decided to visit after receiving an invitation via Twitter from a University of Alabama student. David Harris of Mobile had asked in a tweet April 30 if he would be willing to perform a relief show in Alabama, Sheen said.

Sheen spent the day in Tuscaloosa meeting with storm victims and first responders. He posed for photographs with police officers and National Guard soldiers, accompanied by one of his so-called goddesses – marijuana magazine model Natalie Kenly – and former major league baseball player Todd Zeile.

At each stop, he was swarmed by dozens of people asking for autographs and photographs. Sheen also stopped by an area Kmart to buy flashlights for some of the thousands still without electricity. He paid the $324.07 tab with his own Visa card, and then brought them to a relief center amid loud cheers and applause.

“I’m astounded,” said one of the people at the center, Adrian Norfleet. “I just can’t believe someone would care so much.”

Tuscaloosa Mayor Walt Maddox said he welcomed Sheen’s visit, which likely would focus even more national attention on the city of about 83,000.

“I hope he’s sincere when he says he’ll come back,” Maddox said. Sheen said he is planning to return for the benefit show and hopes to hold it at the Tuscaloosa Amphitheater.

One of Sheen’s stops was at a destroyed Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. He walked through the rubble amid the pungent odor of rotting food, and left through an opening in what had been a walk-in freezer. Later, while going through the ruins of an apartment complex, he said he hoped people could find sentimental possessions.

“Little personal items mean so much in this kind of devastation,” Sheen said.

Sheen posted a photo Monday on Twitter showing the wreckage of a home with a message: “I’m in Tuscaloosa. It’s beyond words. Info coming soon on how you can all help.”

 

The 45-year-old actor has been sharing his home with two ‘goddesses’, porn star Bree Olson and part-time model Natalie Kenly, for the last two months, but has now revealed he has parted ways with Bree.

Taking to the stage for his ‘Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat is Not An Option Show’ in Florida over the weekend, Charlie told the crowd he had been dumped in a cell phone message by Bree.

Later in the show, he was asked how he copes with juggling two women at once, prompting the actor to quip: “Not well, because one left.”

Despite his women woes, Charlie seemed unconcerned during the performance, even kissing an unnamed older lady who was on stage during his question and answer portion of the show.

He then gave the woman – who a member of his entourage described as a “cutie pie” – a hug before she left the stage.

The former ‘Two and a Half Men’ star also invited troubled actress Lindsay Lohan to spend 24 hours with him.
He said: “I would hug her and let her know it’s gonna be OK.”

 

While Charlie Sheen has been blabbing about his life at every chance he gets, one person close to him has remained remarkably quiet: Denise Richards.

But the mother of two of his daughters – 7-year-old Sam and 5-year-old Lola – broke her months-long silence Thursday night on Bravo’s “Watch What Happens Live.”

“We’re not in the best place right now, to be honest with you,” Richards told host Andy Cohen of her relationship with her ex-husband.

But the 40-year-old admitted she does “still communicate with him,” even though he has repeatedly bashed her on-stage during his “Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat Is Not an Option” tour.

“I haven’t heard the actual show but I’ve heard bits and pieces,” she said. “I just think there’s places you shouldn’t go, but he chooses to and that’s his choice.”

And while Richards calls it “hurtful,” she realizes “he can do what he wants in his show.”

The actress revealed she’s met Sheen’s “goddesses” – Natalie Kenly and Rachel Oberlin, also known as Bree Olson – but has managed to keep their kids away from the women.

“This is his lifestyle and I’ve accepted it,” she said, adding the caveat that “there’s things that I don’t think are the most appropriate for two young impressionable daughters.”

And probably not appropriate for Sheen’s 2-year-old sons with soon-to-be ex-wife Brooke Mueller.

Richards confirmed reports that she has offered to care for the twins while both troubled parents try to work out their personal issues.

“I wasn’t asking for custody or anything like that,” she clarified. “But I definitely – I’ve put it out there several times over the last couple years that if they need help, I’m here.”

“I would love to have the boys to stay and be with the girls,” she said. “Whatever help they needed, I was definitely offering.”

Richards seems to get along well enough with Mueller, though she said the two haven’t spoken since Mueller went back to rehab earlier this week.

“I give Brooke a lot of credit that she’s going to try and fix the issue,” Richards said.

But one thing she can’t offer much insight on is Sheen’s sobriety.

“I’m not with him” she explained. “I don’t know if he’s sober or not.”

“It makes me sad to see him on a very wonderful, well-written, hugely popular show to going down this path,” she said.

 

D.C. police are investigating why actor Charlie Sheen received a police escort from an area airport to his show in downtown Washington this week.

Police spokeswoman Gwendolyn Crump said late Thursday that the police department’s internal affairs unit is investigating the incident.

On Tuesday, D.C. police used lights and sirens as they escorted the former “Two and a Half Men” star from Dulles International Airport to his stage show, “Violent Torpedo of Truth: Defeat Is Not an Option.” At the time, Sheen was running nearly an hour late for the show.

Sheen tweeted about the ride and included a picture of a speedometer reaching about 80 mph.

Councilman Phil Mendleson says he met with D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier on Thursday. He says Lanier did not authorize the escort.

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