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Charlie Sheen gets replaced, then roasted

After a closed casket ceremony on “Two and a Half Men”, Charlie Sheen gets cremated on Comedy Central.

How many people get to watch their own funeral? Twice. In the same night.

That was Charlie Sheen's welcome to the work week. Of course, at this point, "work week" probably has a different connotation for Charlie than it does for the rest of us. As Seth MacFarlane, the master of ceremonies on Comedy Central's Roast of Charlie Sheen said to the man of the hour last night, "You've gone from Ferris Bueller's Day Off to having every day off." (see MacFarlane's opening monolgue in video, below).

Ah but first there was the passing of the torched on Two and a Half Men. Sheen, as you'll recall, flamed his way out of the lead role on TV's top comedy, a part that was custom built for him, a cushy job that made him the highest paid actor on TV. But it was cutting into his busy recreational schedule.

So as the ninth season of Two and a Half Men began last night, it was adios Goodtime Charlie and hello Ashton Kutcher.

The episode began in a funeral parlor with Charlie's remains in a closed casket and a crowd of beautiful bitter babes in black -- including Jeri Ryan and Jenny McCarthy – gathered to make sure the STD riddled Casanova was really dead.

Charlie's stalker/widow Rose (Melanie Lynskey) basically explained that she had pushed him in front of a Metro train in Paris and that "his body just exploded...like a balloon full of meat."

Looked like Alan (Jon Cryer) was going to lose Charlie's choice oceanfront home in Malibu. Then out of the blue (literally, he was trying to drown himself) a billionaire techie shows up on Alan's deck.

It's Ashton Kutcher as (I'm not making this up) Walden Schmidt. The writers are going to have to decide what they intend to to do with this character: is he going to be a dorky socially inept recluse or is he going to be the guy who beds two hot chicks the same night his wife kicks him out. Until then it's kind of hard to forecast how this show will mesh.

By the way, if you're worth $1.3 billion in California and your wife divorces you, you're not a billionaire anymore, buddy.

Two and a Half Men still has that rollicking rapid comic rhythm and loosey-goosey style but the changeover was hardly seamless. At this point, Kutcher isn't suited to the part and the part isn't suited to him.

Half an hour later, Charlie was roasted on Comedy Central by a head-scratchingly eclectic panel (Jon Lovitz, Kate Walsh of Private Practice, Steve-O, Mike Tyson, William Shatner and others). It was Sheen's job to sit in the hot seat for 97 minutes and chuckle as one after the other heaped scorn on him.

One of the roasters, Jeff Ross, who took part in Sheen's "Torpedo of Truth" tour this summer, noted, "This lineup is so pathetic, I was hoping I would get replaced by Ashton Kutcher."

Ross also joked, "Martin Sheen and Emilio Estevez said they would have been here tonight but they had a family obligation."

Claiming to be an old friend of Charlie's, Lovitz said, "He's nothing like the character he plays on TMZ."

It got nastier. Comedian Anthony Jeselnik riffed, "The only reason you got on TV in the first place is because God hates Michael J. Fox."

The strangest segment of the evening, hands-down, belonged to Tyson. Adopting a refined aura and name-dropping Homer, Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost, he still managed to get bleeped more than anyone on the dais. I'm not sure what you have to say to get censored on cable.

Sheen has been busy lately on his reparation tour, acting sane and contrite all the doo-dah day (during  appearances from Today to The Tonight Show). He capped it off with a gracious (if self-serving) benediction for Two and Half Men during the Emmys on Sunday night.

Whatever healing his campaign has accomplished, last night's Roast undid.

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