For seven sidesplitting seasons, Charlie Harper (Charlie Sheen) has loved 'em and left 'em. Last season, however, Charlie's fiancee Chelsea met a doctor who was generous, thoughtful and mature (in short, everything that Charlie's not) and she left him! Charlie, of course, - after pickling himself in booze and self-pity - handles the situation in typical Charlie fashion. Which means lots of laughs for Men fans. It's a return to bachelordom for the Harpers as TV's #1 comedy finds its hilarious form once more. Add in the amorous blunders of Charlie's divorcee brother Alan and the lovable, but sometimes cement-headed decisions of Charlie's teenaged nephew Jake and these (almost three) men add up to riotous fun. With high-profile guest stars and the steady comedic guidance of comedy master Chuck Lorre (The Big Bang Theory), the Harper household is looking great for season eight! watch
For six seasons, Charlie Harper has loved 'em and left 'em. In Season 7, he gets left. TV's #1 comedy pulls a hilarious switcheroo when Charlie's fiancee Chelsea meets a doctor (score one) who's generous, thoughtful and mature (score three more). She vamooses, and Charlie - after pickling himself in booze and self-pity - handles the situation in typical Charlie fashion. Which means lots of laughs for Men fans. But Charlie isn't the only Harper making cement-headed decisions. Alan decides the only thing that separates him from a love god is hair. So he tries the spray-on variety. And Jake decides what he needs to navigate the perilous waters of teenage dating is advice. From Charlie. watch
The swinging-bachelor lifestyle of commercial-jingle composer -- and chronic gambler -- Charlie Harper (Sheen) was sorely disrupted when his Malibu beach house was invaded by his uptight brother, Alan (Cryer), and Alan's ten-year-old son, Jake (Jones). Given the childish hedonism of Charlie and the domestic immaturity of the soon-to-be-divorced Alan, young Jake turned out to be the true "grown-up" in the Harper household. watch