TRIGGER WARNING: This article contains references to alcohol and drugComedian Andy Dick recently shared a chilling account of his overdose ordeal, turning a dark chapter into a raw lesson on survival and second chances. To many, this might be a small incident, but for Andy Dick, opening up about something so endangering was a life-changing lesson.The beloved funnyman, Andrew R. Dick, spoke candidly on the Howie Does Stuff podcast with Howie Mandel, three months after collapsing unresponsive on a Hollywood street in December 2025.Andy Dick woke up in an ambulance with zero recollection of the chaos. His heart had stopped beating. He turned purple, stopped breathing entirely until good Samaritans hit him with Narcan. Friends watched in horror as Andy Dick slumped over, blue in the face and hands. A brain scan later revealed the damage. About five to seven holes scarred his brain. These affect his memory in ways that still baffle him. According to E! news online, when Mandel asked about lesions, Andy Dick paused. “That’s not the term I remember they used,” he admitted, his recall fuzzy from the very injuries.
Sobriety’s daily grind
Today, Andy Dick lives in a sober facility. Drug tests keep him accountable. Coffee is his only vice now. “I’m not high. I don’t take pills. I only consume coffee,” he declared simply in an interview with E! News online. Boredom tempts him, though. “I get bored easily. I enjoy fun. I like a little bit of danger,” Andy Dick confessed. Mandel reminded him of the career at stake. The comedian nodded thoughtfully. “It’s not like I’m out there thinking, ‘I’m going to wake up and throw it away today,’ [but] sometimes that thought does cross my mind.”Family anchors Andy Dick’s fight. Father to adult kids Lucas, Meg, and Jacob, he awaits a third grandchild. “I have to,” he told Mandel. “Do you know how challenging this is for me?” His past battles with addiction run deep. Rehab stints failed before. He even admitted crack use right after the overdose. Yet voices like Anthony Hopkins, sober since 1975 after his own blackout scare, or Tom Holland quitting booze in 2022 to escape feeling “enslaved,” echo Andy Dick’s struggle.DISCLAIMER: If you or someone you know is struggling with alcohol or substance abuse, please seek help from available helplines or support organizations.
