
In sports parlance, every now and then a rookie sensation comes along and is an instant success. Like Robert Redford in
The Natural, only it's fact and not fiction. In TV parlance, Simon Baker -- who kind of looks like younger Redford (think
The Sting and
The Way We Were) -- has pulled off a rookie success that makes him look like pure gold.
The latest weekly Nielsen ratings are in and
The Mentalist is number one, just slightly ahead of
NCIS, with 18.8 million viewers. Simon Baker has a certifiable, solid and probably long-term hit series on his hands, and you know the powers that be at CBS have to be dancing in the corridors at the Black Rock.

Recently, I wrote about why I respect, admire, and -- yes -- love
Turner Classic Movies. Well, today they've done something else to reinforce my feelings.
On June 2, TCM will air a salute to director Sydney Pollack, showing four of his films. The Oscar-winning director, who was also an actor and producer,
passed away on Monday following a short bout with cancer. It was only a few months ago that the word spread in Hollywood that he was seriously ill. Film critic
Joseph Morgenstern wrote a salute to him on February 2 in the
Wall Street Journal, honoring the man before his death.
Sadly, the cancer that fell
Sydney Pollack was one that didn't respond to treatment.
On Monday, TCM will show Sydney Pollack's directorial debut in features, 1965's
The Slender Thread starring Sidney Poitier and Anne Bancroft. In the same year, he won an Emmy for directing
The Game, part of the
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theater anthology series. On TV, he'd also done
Ben Casey and
The Fugitive episodes, learning his craft.