" I was n’t the same guy they had hired . "
This post contains discussion of substance abuse.#
Eric Dane’s been in plenty of things at this point, but you definitely know him best from his time on ABC’s long-running TV drama juggernautGrey’s Anatomy.#
Eric played Mark Sloan onGrey’sfor six years — from 2006 to 2012, specifically. He also came back on the show for a guest spot in 2021, but we won’t go into the specifics of that appearance because it’s a big spoiler.#
So, Eric recently appeared on theArmchair Expert with Dax Shepardpodcast, and during the episode he went into the exact specifics (as he sees it, at least) around hisGrey’sdeparture — which, he really hasn’t spoken about in the past.#
“I didn’t leave so much as I think I was let go,” he said, noting that he was “struggling” at the time with substance abuse issues.#
“They didn’t let me go because of that, although it definitely didn’t help,” he specified, before also explaining that his longevity on the show itself — and the resulting price tag of his salary that came with it — was likely the reason why he eventually took his final bow.#
“As most of these actors who have spent significant time on the show, you start to become very expensive for the network,” he explained.#
“And the network knows that the show is going to do what it’s going to do irrespective of who they keep on it — as long as they have their Grey, they were fine.”#
Eric also said that he “wasn’t the same guy they hired” by the end of his run, and that he “understood” when, and why, his number was up — and he had nothing but kind words forGrey’shead honchoShonda Rhimes, too.#
“She protected us fiercely,” he said of Shonda, who he also called “really great.” “She protected us publicly, she protected us privately… I love Shonda Rhimes, and she protected me, but I was probably fired.”#
“It wasn’t ceremoniously like, ‘You’re fired,’ it was just like, ‘You’re not coming back.’”#
You can check out the entire interviewhere.#
If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, you can call SAMHSA’s National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) and find more resourceshere.#









