Pilot
- Episode aired Sep 22, 2003
- TV-14
- 23m
After 12 years of marriage, Alan's wife Judith, kicks him out and he turns to his older brother Charlie for help. Charlie has trouble altering his carefree lifestyle to accommodate the prese... Read allAfter 12 years of marriage, Alan's wife Judith, kicks him out and he turns to his older brother Charlie for help. Charlie has trouble altering his carefree lifestyle to accommodate the presence of his 10-year-old nephew Jake.After 12 years of marriage, Alan's wife Judith, kicks him out and he turns to his older brother Charlie for help. Charlie has trouble altering his carefree lifestyle to accommodate the presence of his 10-year-old nephew Jake.
- Rodney
- (as Frankie Jay Allison)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCharlie and Jake's first encounter with a woman in the supermarket is with Suzanne, played by Jennifer Taylor in her first appearance as one of four characters: Suzanne here; Tina in Last Chance to See Those Tattoos (2004); Nina in Our Leather Gear Is in the Guest Room (2007); and finally, recurring character Chelsea for around 30 episodes.
- GoofsJudith is staying with her sister in Las Vegas for the weekend, so there's no reason for Alan to stay at Charlie's house with Jake. He could just stay at his own house until Judith returns.
- Quotes
Jake: Why is your head exploding?
Charlie: Well, I drank a little too much wine last night.
Jake: If it makes you feel bad, why do you drink it?
Charlie: Nobody likes a wise-ass, Jake.
Jake: You have to put a dollar in the swear jar. You said "ass".
Charlie: Tell you what. Here's $20. That should cover me until lunch.
- Crazy creditsAs with the end of every episode, Chuck Lorre always has a paragraph at the end of the episode. This episode production note says: "CHUCK LORRE PRODUCTIONS, #108 When Dharma was cancelled, my heart was broken. Over the next few years my efforts to mend it by creating a new show led to an even deeper emotional nadir when I noticed I had somehow become the author of a seemingly endless succession of failed pilots and pilot scripts. This was not a big enough string of stinkers to lower AOL-Time Warner a stock price (that had already been done by people more incompetant than myself), but my ill-advised attempts at heart-mending were sufficient enough to cause people to not look up from their cobb salads when I ambled into the WB commissary (in Hollywood even has beens amble). But I was indominatable. I kept writing...and failing...and ambling. And then, about a year ago, my good friend and favorite cross-to-bear, Lee Aronsohn, told me he needed to write something fairly quickly in order to keep the Writer's Guild health insurance. Everyone -- friends, agents, execs -- told me not to get involved. They assured me that I was too big, too successful, for such a partnership. You see where this is going. Lee and I wrote "Two and a Half Men". Which brings me to the glaringly obvious spiritual lesson to all this. How do you mend a broken heart? The BeeGees never figured it out, but I did. You help a friend keep that health insurance from lapsing."
- SoundtracksManly Men
(Theme Song)
Composed by Grant Geissman, Lee Aronsohn and Chuck Lorre
Performed by Dominik Hauser (upright bass), Elizabeth Daily and studio musicians (vocals)
- mattiasflgrtll6
- Jan 26, 2014
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro