Thursday, March 3, 2011

The Charlie Sheen Show, An 'Epic' PR Contest


The Great Charlie Sheen Show -- the one that's been transfixing the media, lighting up Twitter and giving gossip bloggers carpal tunnel for the past week -- is, at its heart, a PR battle. A pitched and TV/shock jock-friendly one, but a PR battle nonetheless.

On one side is Sheen, as of Monday publicist-less, trying to portray himself as an actor in recovery trying to get back to work. On the other side is CBS, the network that has enjoyed sitcom-segment-leading ratings by airing a show with a Sheen-played, Sheen-esque main character, trying to portray its star as an out-of-control liability. But wait a minute, isn't he? Isn't what CBS bought into?

In terms of public sentiment, it's difficult to say that Sheen is winning the battle at this point. He has often appeared as-advertised: wired, disheveled, his face wearing every minute of his age and abuses. His rants, which have bordered on anti-Semitic and often strayed into both the profane and the ludicrous, seem to play directly into CBS's custom-made image of him. Is life imitating art, or the other way around?

If he is trying to disseminate his key message of being an actor endeavoring to put the past behind him and get back to pursuing his craft, that message is being drowned out by his outward image, his bombast, and his unwillingness to apologize.

So Charlie Sheen is no sympathy-demanding David battling CBS's PR Goliath. But perhaps he's not the drug-addled Don Quixote he seems to be playing on TV and talk radio shows.

Charlie Sheen may be waging his PR battle with CBS in a canny, if unpolished, way. It's certainly not a strategy that a publicist would put forward. Time will determine if it's an effective one.

CBS has been furiously painting a portrait of "Charlie Fiend," while never actually issuing a statement or making a comment to that effect. Yet is there any doubt that the CBS PR machine is doing exactly that in an effort to distance itself from its once-lucrative, always-mercurial, now-loose-cannon star?

Doing so gives CBS a handy cover for halting production on "Two and a Half Men." Claiming that Sheen's off-set performances jeopardize the show's ability to function (a claim reinforced by co-star Jon Cryer's remarks more than a month ago on Conan's late-night show; who knows, perhaps Cryer was put up to that line by CBS brass?), CBS has used Sheen's personal troubles to put the brakes on its sitcom stalwart.

This, of course, is when The Great Charlie Sheen Show went on the road.

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