View Full Version : Chuck Lorre: 2 ½ Things to Know About Charlie Sheen's Boss


Brian Damage
02-25-2011, 11:35 PM
The latest TV drama to grab viewers' attention is not on the small screen: It's the clash of TV titans Charlie Sheen and Chuck Lorre, the star vs. the creator of Two and a Half Men.

So just who is the man behind the scenes of the successful TV show that's kept Sheen in steady employment for the past eight years?

Born Charles Levine in 1952, the twice-married Lorre got an inauspicious start as a short-order cook and soda jerk at his dad's luncheonette on New York's Long Island before going into TV writing, and finally making it big as an executive producer.

Thing 1: Tough but Likeable
A 2007 Entertainment Weekly profile labeled him "the angriest man in television," but many who work with him say he's a good boss.

"He's a great guy and treats the crew and everybody really well," says a source on the set of Men. "He throws nice parties for the crew and invites a lot of people over to his place for the opening of the [show] season and gets it all catered."

Adds the source, "Chuck isn't one to avoid a confrontation. If Chuck gets a little bit perturbed, he can get really strict. He likes to do things his way, period. There's no other way."

Known as a hands-on producer, Lorre has worked on Roseanne and Dharma & Greg, and has recently been running three shows at once: Two and a Half Men, Mike & Molly and The Big Bang Theory.

Thing 2: Vanity Card Author
He's also known for creating the industry's wordiest vanity cards – those production company logos that show up after the credits.

One that aired on Valentine's Day read, in part, "I exercise regularly. I eat moderate amounts of healthy food. I be sure to get plenty of rest… If Charlie Sheen outlives me, I'm gonna be really pissed."

Sheen said on a radio show Thursday that he didn't find that funny, calling Lorre a "clown."

On the same day Sheen let loose his rant against Lorre, the vanity card on his Web site was titled simply: "CHUCK LORRE PRODUCTIONS, #333: CENSORED!"

"It was more fun writing these things when I was fairly certain no one was reading them. That is no longer the case," Lorre wrote. "These days it seems like every vanity card is getting scrutinized and criticized."

Thing Half: Lowering the Temperature
But from now on he's going to "let things cool off a little," promising that, "No longer will I share some troublesome piece of my mind."

http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20469316,00.html

http://img2.timeinc.net/ew/dynamic/imgs/110225/chuck-lorre_320.jpg

Yooch
02-26-2011, 01:00 AM
One of many things I've learned from my years of work, it's that you may not always agree with the boss, but the reality of it is: He/she is still the boss. You do what they say, unless they tell you to do something wrong or immoral. I'm in no position to judge Charlie Sheen; I don't know the big picture. It seems to me, though, that Charlie Sheen might consider being less contentious.

catlover79
02-26-2011, 02:41 AM
Yes - Charlie Sheen is the one running his mouth off, not Chuck Lorre.