Talk:Angus T. Jones

Untitled
Please add more about his family and religious affinity. Thanks.125.26.118.196 (talk) 22:28, 1 May 2011 (UTC)

Hello, I removed a comment added in about him being in the olypmics and receiving a gold medal before it was stripped. I followed up on the link http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/19242736 and it turns out that this was a completely unrelated person. Probably someone from 9gag or something changed it for fun due to a similarity in facial appearances. - 8/14/2012 2am PST

Critic
The section about his critics of Two and a Half Men is absolutely not clear. It doesn't even clearly state that Jones is a Seven-Day-Adventist. And what does this sentence refer to: "On November 27, the Seventh-day Adventist Church in North America released a statement indicating that the Forerunner Chronicles is not associated with the Adventist Church and that Hudson is not an ordained Seventh-day Adventist pastor."? What is the Forerunner Chronicles and who is Hudson?

Topic copy-pasted here from Erik Per Sullivan's Talk page: "actor VS former child actor"
Why is Erik Per Sullivan considered an actor, while Angus T. Jones is a former child actor? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 151.99.198.66 (talk) 15:17, 18 March 2015 (UTC)
 * If there's no good reason for Jones' classification that you can see, then you should change it. From his article, it looks like he's had more recent roles. Thank you, Wordreader (talk)

Number of Episodes ?!
Hi,

In 2010, Jones became the highest paid child star in television at the age of 17 when his new contract with Two and a Half Men guaranteed him $7.8 million over the next two seasons, amounting to $300,000 for each of the 26 episodes.

I did not find a single of all 12 seasons which had 26 episodes?! 22 to 24 episodes was the most common except for the last season which was I think except Season 1 (where they did not have decided if there will be more series) the 12th Season is the smallest, and you could think (I did first, but than I used math, its reads like he get 7.8 million for the next 2 seasons and not "7.8 million per season for season x and y" or so...

Does he really had so few scenes later in the series? (My mother is the biggest fan, we just bought the DVD for her for all 8 seasons with charly, without him she does not want), however, he was away for soo many episodes that from like 45 to 50 episodes he only played in 26?! I never watched that far, only the early start of Ashton Kutcher, but I was not that BIG fan before too, so..... Anyone knows what his net worth is? I will read the article which other income sources he had after this, but he has maybe the "child series disease",

everyone seeing him in another series or movie will think "Hey, thats Jake Harper from "two and a half men".... For example "Kevin alone at home" or how the original title was, he was "cute", they made 3 movies, but the 3rd already sucked hard and hada low budget I think, but the first two made him extreme rich, first divorced (I think) parents wanted him, for the cash of course, since it was not really his until he got 18, and I do not know if anything was left than for him, he never became a serious role and started pills, alcohol etc.... Greetings Kilon22 (talk) 21:18, 26 September 2016 (UTC)


 * The number of episodes per season are listed here: List of Two and a Half Men episodes


 * You're correct....there were no 26-episode seasons, ever. I think it was trying to say that Angus T. Jones only appeared in 26 of the 69 episodes of the Ashton Kutcher yrs of the show, not that there were 26 episodes per season. Tho still credited as a cast regular, Chuck Lorre had Jake join the Army after Jones lost his nut not long after Charlie Sheen had his meltdown, & dramatically scaled back the Jake appearances.


 * Season 1 had 24 episodes, so not the season with the least amount of episodes. It varied a bit in number of episodes per season, with one being as low as 19, one that was 22, but 24 seems to be the average amount of episodes per season when Sheen was on board, 22-23-24 for Seasons 9, 10, & 11 with Kutcher on board. The seasons with the least amount of episodes were Season 8, which only had 16 episodes in the can before Sheen began "Winning!" & they stopped filming in order to revamp & recast after Lorre fired him, & the last, Season 12, which also had only 16 episodes for some reason. You could argue it was only 15, tho, because the series finale, "Of Course He's Dead", was a "to be continued" 2-episode arc.


 * For a while the "half man" was Charlie's hitherto unknown, hard-drinking, commitment-phobic, lesbian daughter, Jenny, played by Amber Tamblyn, who practically disappeared once she went to live with her grandmother, Evelyn. That was a shame, because (I thought) Jenny was a great character & the casting twist of her being a female Charlie was fun, & they should've had her on more frequently. The last season they brought in the lame character of Louis for Walden to adopt, in a vain attempt to recapture Jake's cute little boy role. A lot of Jones' appearances after the show was revamped were merely quick video chats with Alan &/or Walden, as Jake joined the Army after high school graduation. There were 2 episodes where Jake was involved with the Missi character, played by Miley Cyrus, another one where Jake went AWOL to bring home his much older girlfriend, Tammy, played by Jaime Pressly, to introduce her to Alan, & then the episode where he cheated on Tammy with her daughter, Ashley, played by Emily Osment.. He was in the last episode, of course. There weren't all that many episodes in which the plotline centered around Jake in the last 3 seasons once they had his character join the Army.


 * Good on your Mom, during the Kutcher reign I really only enjoyed the episodes that were more Alan-centric, didn't care for the Walden-centric ones. ScarletRibbons (talk) 11:58, 7 June 2019 (UTC)

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Needs new photograph
This article needs a newer photograph of the actor as an adult. Catfurball (talk) 20:04, 21 March 2024 (UTC)