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'Anger Management's' Charlie Sheen: 'To say it's going magically would be an understatement'

Charlie Sheen hopes to be winning the series television game once more.
A year after his much-documented and much-discussed dismissal from CBS' "Two and a Half Men," the actor is headlining a comedy show again. FX launches "Anger Management" -- inspired by the 2003 Adam Sandler-Jack Nicholson movie -- Thursday, June 28, with Sheen starring as a baseball player-turned-unconventional anger therapist.
Much as his previous TV alter ego Charlie Harper incorporated a lot of Sheen's own history and personality, so does his new character ... another "Charlie." He recently discussed the show (executive produced by "Drew Carey Show" veteran Bruce Helford), his colorful recent past and some of the ways in which the two are blending with this writer.
PICS: Charlie Sheen Notable Quotables
PICS: Charlie Sheen Notable Quotables
Zap2it: How has making "Anger Management" gone for you so far?
Charlie Sheen: To say it's going magically would be an understatement. It feels like something is happening here that requires an alignment of planets and a type of lightning in different-sized bottles. You can't plan this type of thing, because everything has fallen into place perfectly.
Zap2it: Since the show is being sold largely on your presence in it, do you anticipate a big viewership?
Charlie Sheen: Whether we can get eyes on this thing is the question, and I believe we can. A lot of people are moving from network to cable in their choices, and I don't think we're going to disappoint. I'm really impressed with Bruce Helford, who knows how to make more than a show. He knows how to make a hit show.
Zap2it: The series is on FX, which is known for edgy shows. Does "Anger Management" fit that bill?

People aren't tuning into a sitcom to hear [expletives], and that was the problem with the other show. That was a funny character, but he only had a few moves that got old after a while. Not everything can be solved with women, cigars and Scotch.
Zap2it: If there is such a thing as a "Charlie Sheen persona," seen in your last series role as well as your cameo reprise of Bud Fox in the 2010 movie "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps," do you feel your "Anger Management" character also has it?
Charlie Sheen: It's a much bigger leap than anything I've been asked to portray. If anything, it's closer to me on "Spin City" than on "Two and a Half Men." He's challenged at every turn. He's a flawed man, but the thrust is atonement, because of how his career ended from his own anger. There's no judgment in his world, which is really interesting and which I really respect.
Zap2it: If this hadn't come up when it did, do you think you would have taken a longer break from series TV?
Zap2it: With that potential for a 100-episode order- - highly unusual for a debuting series these days -- which are you feeling more, excitement or responsibility?
Zap2it: Your ex-wife, Denise Richards, has filmed an episode of the show ... playing your ex-wife. How did that go?
Zap2it: Your father, Martin Sheen, has signed to play your dad on the show. Are other family members involved?
Zap2it: With all that has happened lately where you're concerned, what message would you most like to give people now?
Charlie Sheen: It's hard to sum up the past year with one message. In honesty, at times, it was a hero's journey -- and at other times, not. Consciously or subconsciously, there was some type of plan in the underpinnings of this whole at-times-macabre meltdown. It wasn't completely random, but in retrospect, it feels like it was happening to somebody else.
Zap2it: Was there a point where you finally tired of reading and hearing about it?
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Photo/Video credit: FX
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