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Jason Biggs recalls climbing into trash can to snort cocaine at 4 a.m. during ‘insane’ addiction battle

Jason Biggs has opened up about getting sober after an “absolutely insane” battle with cocaine addiction.

The “American Pie” star, 47, discussed his yearslong fight with drugs and alcohol during a recent appearance on the “Well with Arielle Lorre” podcast.

Biggs, who has been sober for more than seven years, blamed his earlier battles with substance abuse on “being 22 with money in the bank and coke in my pocket and no one saying no to me.”

Jason Biggs in a tan checkered flannel and tan jacket.
Jason Biggs has opened up about his “absolutely insane” battle with cocaine addiction. Well with Arielle Lorre/YouTube
Jason Biggs in a tan checkered flannel and tan jacket and Arielle Lorre in a black top and light sweater around her shoulders.
The “American Pie” star discussed his yearslong fight with drugs and alcohol during an appearance on the “Well with Arielle Lorre” podcast. Well with Arielle Lorre/YouTube

The “Saving Silverman” actor also admitted that in 2008, when he was 30 and had just married his wife, Jenny Mollen, he was “blocking everything out with drugs and alcohol” as his addictions “just got worse and worse.”

Biggs hit rock bottom shortly after when he “climbed into the trash bin” to do cocaine after throwing the drugs away in an effort to quit. It was 4 a.m., and his wife was asleep.

“I lived in the gray area, but I have ‘snorting dust off the floor’ stories or similar to that,” he said on Wednesday. “One of my craziest stories was, I was doing cocaine by myself in my house, and I did what I said was the last line.”

Jason Biggs in a tan checkered flannel and tan jacket with a microphone in front of him.
Biggs has been sober for more than seven years. Well with Arielle Lorre/YouTube
Jason Biggs in a blue suit on a red carpet for the Broadway play "Glengarry Glen Ross."
Biggs blamed his earlier battles with substance abuse on “being 22 with money in the bank and coke in my pocket and no one saying no to me.” FilmMagic

“Within 15 minutes, as soon as my last bump is wearing off, I’m like, ‘What am I doing?’” he continued. “I go into my trash, and I take it out, and I do a line.”

The same thing happened when the “Jersey Girl” actor threw his drugs away again in another attempt to stop using. Biggs went inside to take a sleeping pill, only to go back outside to recover the cocaine he had just thrown away.

“Before I took the Ambien, I was like, ‘One more,’” he told Lorre. “I went outside, and I climbed into the trash bin and got the bag of coke and went upstairs and did another line.”

A still of Jason Biggs in a patterned, button-up shirt from "American Pie."
Biggs revealed that he once climbed into a trash can at 4 a.m. to snort cocaine. Vivian Zink/Universal/Kobal/Shutterstock
Jason Biggs in a patterned button-up shirt and his wife Jenny Mollen in a black jacket.
The “Saving Silverman” star married his wife, Jenny Mollen, in 2008. biggsjason/Instagram

“I was like, ‘What the f–k am I doing? This is absolutely insane,’” Biggs added.

Biggs also noted that he seriously struggled with sobriety while living in Los Angeles.

“I would find myself alone and isolating, and I would find myself breaking whatever sobriety I had,” he admitted. “It was incredibly fragile, obviously, in those early days.”

It wasn’t until Biggs and his wife moved to New York City in 2015 that the “Orange Is the New Black” actor was able to quit drugs and alcohol and get sober.

Jason Biggs in a tan checkered flannel and tan jacket with a microphone in front of his face.
“I was like, ‘What the f–k am I doing? This is absolutely insane,’” the actor said. Well with Arielle Lorre/YouTube
Jason Biggs in a blue suit with a white undershirt.
The “Orange Is the New Black” actor finally got sober after leaving Los Angeles for New York City in 2015. Getty Images for City Harvest

“There’s something about the energy of New York that gives me something, that fills me in a way that Los Angeles couldn’t,” he recognized during the podcast.

“But I do believe coming to New York helped me,” Biggs added. “So, I did fall off the wagon here, but that was seven and a half years ago, and it’s been going well.”