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Isn't Two and a Half Men in danger now that Charlie Sheen is in trouble with the law?
I don't think so. He's only going to get about 30 or 40 days, which will start soon and he should be out in plenty of time for the start of shooting. (And if not, they can probably do a couple of episodes where Charlie is out of town or missing - or in jail - at the beginning of the season.)
Sheen also just signed a new two-year contract in the middle of all of this. CBS is not going to dump a cash-cow like Men if it can avoid it, and they've got Charlie for at least a couple of more years now.
The usual reason for the kind of program move CBS is doing with BBT, which sometime work and sometimes don't, is to take a successful show and use it to "seed" a new night of comedy. The theory is that its current lead-in or follow-up show will be strong enough to survive on its own, while the hit can make the network more competitive on another night. (And I think BBT is more "counter-programming" for something like Survivor than it is a direct competitor. Do the audiences for the two show really overlap? I'm asking because I've never seen an episode of Survivor, or felt any desire to.)
Regards,
Joe