What's Inside?
- Charlie Sheen admitted to losing his virginity at 15 with an escort named Candy, paid for using his father’s credit card.
- He shocked fans by claiming he slept with 47,000 women, saying reckless indulgence felt like “part of my DNA.”
- Now eight years sober, Sheen reflects on his chaotic “Tiger Blood” days in his memoir The Book of Sheen and Netflix doc.
Charlie Sheen has never been one to shy away from shocking confessions, but his latest revelation feels ripped straight out of his famous Two and a Half Men character’s playbook. On a recent appearance on Logan Paul’s Impaulsive podcast, the 60-year-old actor claimed to have slept with nearly 47,000 women. It is indeed a staggering number that immediately sent social media into a frenzy. What makes it even more compelling is how Sheen tied the wildest parts of his past to his very DNA.
Charlie Sheen Candidly Details Sleeping With 47,000 Women

Charlie Sheen openly recalled losing his virginity at just 15, a story that alone could headline a memoir. He shared that he hired an escort named Candy, whom he found in a phone book. “She was Ann-Margret with a Mastercard,” he quipped, before admitting he used his father’s credit card to pay for the encounter. That moment, he says, set the tone for the reckless choices that defined much of his life. “I’m made for degeneracy, for carelessness,” Sheen admitted.
Charlie Sheen opens up about how he’s slept with over 47,000 women and lost his virginity to an escort at 15😳💀👀
pic.twitter.com/oxpSDcKuyM— Killa 🌺 (@KillaKreww) September 24, 2025
“The way it manifests in my life changes at every moment. It could be drugs. It could be women. It could be a million things, right? I’ve always felt it was part of my DNA.”
Logan Paul’s Impaulsive podcast co-host Mike Majlak pressed the actor on how he managed to rack up such staggering numbers of sexual partners. Sheen brushed it off with surprising nonchalance. “It wasn’t as ‘complex’ as you said,” he replied.
“It was more like navigating and dealing with every situation and scenario as they presented themselves or whatever state of mind I was in. That led to the results I was looking for.”
Sheen’s words may sound unbelievable, but his track record makes the claim oddly plausible. Fans have long associated him with stories of marathon binges, cartel warnings, and a lifestyle so extreme that even Hollywood tabloids struggled to keep up.
From Two and a Half Men to Sobriety: Charlie Sheen’s Real-life Parallels

For nearly a decade, Sheen embodied Charlie Harper on Two and a Half Men— a wealthy, womanizing jingle writer whose beachside life revolved around alcohol, parties, and women. The line between Sheen’s on-screen persona and his off-screen reality became so blurred that his personal struggles eventually ended the show’s most successful era. In 2011, his addictions spiraled out of control, forcing the network to fire him despite the sitcom’s massive ratings.
Looking back today, Sheen sees those turbulent years through a different lens. In his Netflix documentary aka Charlie Sheen and memoir The Book of Sheen, he reflects not only on his infamous “Tiger Blood” days but also on the turning point that led him to sobriety.
Now eight years clean, Sheen attributes his decision to quit drugs and alcohol to his five children. His daughter Sami even revealed in a heartfelt video that learning about her father’s journey brought her to tears.
Still, the legendary Hollywood bad boy hasn’t lost his humor. Even while unpacking the chaos of his past, Sheen used vivid analogies. “Don’t wear hamburger pants on safari and not expect to be attacked by a lion,” he joked, describing the consequences of immersing himself in a dangerous lifestyle.
Tori Spelling recently added more color to Sheen’s past, recounting how the actor once invited her to a party that ended with him casually offering her a crack pipe. She declined, but her reflections highlighted both his brilliance and the darker moments of his life. “Talk about charming, smart, funny, witty. This guy was it,” she recalled in her chat with misSPELLING podcast, even as she admitted his presence could feel like “bad news.”