Andy Dick has been released from rehab after a crack cocaine overdose in mid-December 2025, Page Six has confirmed.
The troubled comedian, 60, told TMZ on Monday that he left a treatment center in Palm Springs, Calif., just over 50 days after checking in.
He has entered a sober living facility near Beverly Hills and said he will continue to focus on his recovery.
Dick added that he is taking things one day at a time on his sobriety journey.
A representative for him did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment.
On December 9, a video of the star of “The Andy Dick Show” collapsing on the cement steps of a Hollywood building, leaving his glasses on the ground in front of him, went viral. He was unresponsive.
Several people who were with him tried to wake him up but were unsuccessful. One of them made Dick lean back to administer Narcan, a nasal spray drug used to reverse opioid overdoses.
Witnesses later told the Post that they thought Dick was dead because he was turning blue. Witnesses noted that Dick was given multiple doses of Narcan and said that after about 10 minutes he “stood up” and acted like “nothing happened.”
Paramedics and police officers were called to the scene, but witnesses revealed that Dick was not taken to hospital.
The next day, the actor told TMZ in a video interview that he was “100% okay,” but changed that to “110%.”
The men who had been with him the day before had attended the sit-in, and one of them said the group had “planned the entire day.”
Dick admitted that he “sneaked away” at the time, adding that his friend “did some things that messed me up” during that time.
The man made sure to point out that it was a group effort to “save himself.”
Dick then explained that he came across a man on the street who was “in bad shape” and “smoking something on aluminum foil.” He clearly knew it was a crack.
“I was like, guess what? I might need a little bit of that. I wanted to see what he was up to. And I don’t mind a little crack every once in a while,” the “Hoodwinked” star confessed, but his real kryptonite is said to be alcohol.
A friend who administered Narcan explained that he livestreamed the incident because “I wanted to record what was happening because it doesn’t normally happen.”
Asked if he thought he was “in a good place right now,” Dick replied, “Very good!” When asked if he was planning on entering a rehab facility, he answered, “No,” adding, “I have no intention of going into a rehab facility.”
But a few days later, he changed his tune, crediting his former Sober House co-star Jennifer Jimenez and her husband Tim Ryan with adapting their speaking skills for earning him a “full scholarship offer” to a Palm Springs treatment center.
If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this article, please contact the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).
