Categories
Concerts

People love watching train wrecks and car crashes!! And even after reading the reviews, I would still go if he was playing at a theatre near me!!

Sheen’s ‘Torpedo’ bombs in Detroit
DETROIT – After hearing chants of ìRefund! Refund!î and being booed, even Charlie Sheen knew his ìViolent Torpedo of Truthî had bombed on its debut in Detroit Saturday night.
Sheen, until recently the highest paid actor on a TV sitcom for portraying a skirt-chasing bachelor on ìTwo and a Half Men,î staged a live variety show to prove to the TV producers who fired him that he was on the mend from more than a year of legal troubles and drug and alcohol abuse.
Sheen, 45, became a media spectacle in recent weeks with a series of off-the-wall interviews in which he flaunted his lifestyle, amassed a Twitter following of more than 3 million, made ìwinningî his mantra and boasted of having ìtiger bloodì that gave him a superheroís constitution.
Sheenís ìMy Violent Torpedo of Truth: Defeat is Not an Optionî show was meant to prove that he still had what it takes to please audiences but critics panned it and audiences thought it could use work, at best.
The comedy revue with rapper Dirt Nasty and comedian Kirk Fox, among others, brought catcalls from the audience and not even Sheenís girlfriend ìgoddessesî could win fans.
Twenty minutes after the show had ended, some 750 die-hard fans lingered in the theater and Sheen returned to the stage flanked by his gals.
ìThis is an experiment. Weíre working some s— out,î he said.
Sheen and his troupe proved awkward at best. Fans had thought they might hear inside stories of the drug-and-drink-fueled parties and wild nights that hospitalized him and sent him to rehab.
But they never heard a single tale and nearly every one of Sheenís monologues and comedy skits had to be aborted due Sheenís inability to handle the rowdy, unhappy audience.
‘NEEDS A LOT OF WORK’
ìI think this show needs a lot of work,î Ron Ruff, 52, of Fenton, Michigan, told Reuters after the show.
ìIt was a bomb tonight. When you have people walking out and itís only the first quarter of the show, well, thatís not a good sign.î
Early reviews from critics were just as bad. ìCall it ítiger bloodí or ëAdonis DNAí if you will. Just donít call it entertainment,î wrote The Hollywood Reporterís David Rooney.
Sheen, 45, has been a media sensation for more than a year following his arrest in December 2009 for assaulting his then-wife Brooke Mueller. He has since pleaded guilty to assaulting Mueller and spent time in rehab.
But his troubles did not end and more recently, media reports have told of Sheenís wild Hollywood lifestyle, parties and porn stars. Those reports and a recent rehab led to his firing from ìTwo and a Half Menî by Warner Bros. television and the CBS TV network.
Sheen has retaliated by suing the showís producers for $100 million and he has openly ridiculed producer Chuck Lorre. The parties remain in litigation and the live shows were meant to be something of a public comeback for Sheen.
The Detroit performance was opening night of 22 shows in 20 U.S. and Canadian cities. About 4,700 tickets were sold for the show at the Fox Theater in downtown Detroit and only a few seats were empty.