EPISODE
SEASON
Two and a Half Men - Season 7
Season 7 opens with Chelsea encouraging Charlie to help his ex-fiancé Mia launch her music career; Charlie's fiancée, Chelsea, convincing him to let Melissa, Alan's girlfriend, move in, then the girls take over the house.
7 September 1969, Manhattan, New York, USA
11 August 1989, Los Angeles, California, USA
19 October 1972, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
19 June 1953, Los Angeles, California, USA
20 September 1953, Houston, Texas, USA
20 February 1973, Santa Monica, California, USA
5 September 1967, Los Angeles, California, USA
22 July 1928, Burlington, Vermont, USA
December 9, 1989 in Paris, Texas, USA
24 March 1979, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
29 December 1950, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
23 July 1951, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
23 November 1948, Brooklyn, New York, USA
12 August 1980, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
13 May 1977, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
6 December 1976, Arcadia, California, USA
26 January 1955, Nijmegen, Gelderland, Netherlands
September 11, 2018
It's a foul, misogynistic, relentlessly immoral program. It also happens to be very, very funny.
September 11, 2018
All I have to say is: the older Charlie Sheen gets, the more often I catch myself thinking, "Why is President Bartlet arguing with that hot chick in bed?"
September 11, 2018
A strange season really. Beginning with great purpose, but fizzling out towards the end storywise, the bedrock of laughs is nevertheless still there, and Two and a Half Men continues to be one of the best conventional sitcoms on television.
September 11, 2018
Charlie Sheen and Emmy-award winning Jon Cryer (sorry NPH, we had to throw that in) continue to not disappoint.
September 11, 2018
The characters, storylines and shenanigans are just as infantile and immature as they were in the first season. What works in this show is that while many shows fall into caricature, this series thrives on it.
September 12, 2018
One of the things I was missing about this show is the genius of its intentional simplicity -- it's not trying to be a deeply complex sitcom.

