Nanobionic man
Jake I haven't seen "Jake 2.0" yet. I'm probably too old for that
demographic, but as a '70s child who grew up running in slow motion
while humming the theme music to "The Six Million Dollar Man," I'm
sure I'd be watching this one if I had a bit more time -- or a TiVo --
on my hands. But bionics are so '70s, and nanobots are now the rage.
Some critics apparently like the formula, according to
eclipsemagazine.com.
"Where "The Flash" gained super speed from the combination of being
doused in chemicals and struck by lightning, Jake gains cleg his
abilities from having nanobots [molecule sized computers,
programmed to keep a living organism in perfect health] invade his
body when their container breaks and cuts his arm. In short, he
becomes a version of "The Six Million Dollar Man" only his
technology is actually a living part of him - where Steve Austin's
abilities, though a part of him, remained inorganic attachments."
Laugh if you'd like, but reality does occasionally catch up with
fiction. Just ask Curtis Grimsley, a World Trade Center worker whose
life was saved by a C-Leg on Sept. 11, 2001. It's not exactly the $6
million ('70s money) "better, stronger, faster" bionics that CBS
envisioned, but it did the job for Grimsley.
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