Anet Gazette All the news that fits, we print

The Mentalist

May 1

I started watching The Mentalist on CBS from the very beginning.  I was already a fan of Simon Baker from “The Devil Wears Prada” (he played the suave Englishman who woos Ann Hathaway  from her chef boyfriend), and I am a student of hypnosis.  The first season had lots of hijinks around hypnotic suggestion, intuition and telepathy.  The show opener included a definition of Mentalist as someone who uses the the powers of the mind.  All this seems to have faded away.

The show is one of the few that CBS has in the Top 10, and it is interesting to see how it has evolved.  The hypnosis stuff had pretty much disappeared by the second season, replaced with the “fake psychic” riff from “Psych” which does it better.  The very first episodes established Simon Baker as a man adrift after the brutal murder of his wife and daughter by Red John.  He was bent on revenge and found shelter with a rag-tag team of Sacramento investigators looking for the same murderer.

Now the through-line about Red John is very light.  Patrick Jane is no longer a troubled man with a charlatan’s past, he just seems to be rude to suspects and badly behaved during investigations.  And the biggest surprise of late is the inclusion of movie-star Malcom McDowell who plays an L. Ron Hubbard-like leader of a religious cult.

There have been so many movie stars crossing over to TV of late.  I like it but I don’t understand why it is happening.  Did the SAG, AFTRA union rules change?

How to Build a Personality Disorder

April 30

Last weekend I went camping with a group of people, including a five-year old boy.  He was a delight and the apple of his parents eyes.  He was a late-in-life gift, arriving when his two older sisters were already in high school.  Diego and I spent several hours building sandcastles as part of the Doran Beach Sand Castle Competiton.  He wanted to win, and he looked triumphant when  his picture was taken with “Mr. Diego,” his pyramid-like sand creation with two sticks poking out at rakish angles.

I found myself thinking about the obituary of Dr. James Masterson who died on April 12.  Dr. Masterson won fame by pointing out that personality disorders like Narcissism and Borderline Personality Disorder are created by mistreating toddlers aged 18 to 36 months old.  It was clear that Diego had a very good opinion of himself and that he has been praised often.  Luckily, he has two big sisters who gave him frequent reality adjustments.  He had none of the black/white, on/off, love/hate fast-changing emotions of kids whose caregivers withhold love as punishment, then get all gooey when they feel guilty later on.  He was full of energy and ideas and loved to play.

Other kids were going around stomping on unguarded sand castles.  Not Diego.  He was inventing new games for chasing floating toys in the surf. What a joy!

Newer Entries »