Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Watch The Six Million Dollar Man Season 2. Scientists save a pilot after a near-fatal plane crash by implanting him with high-tech devices as limbs that give him superhuman abilities.

  2. The Bionic Woman, American television show, a spin-off of science-fiction thriller The Six Million Dollar Man, about a bionically enhanced secret agent. The show aired for three seasons, first from 1976 to 1977 on ABC and then from 1977 to 1978 on NBC. The show’s eponymous character, Jamie Sommers (played by Lindsay Wagner ), was a ...

  3. The Six Million Dollar Man is an American science fiction and action television series, running from 1973 to 1978, about a former astronaut, USAF Colonel Steve Austin, portrayed by Lee Majors. After a NASA test flight accident, Austin is rebuilt with bionic implants which give him superhuman strength, speed and vision.

  4. The Six Million Dollar Man. An accident left astronaut, Steve Austin clinging to life. A bionics genius brought him back. Better, stronger, faster than before. Now with a 20:1 zoom feature with infrared tracking tech in his left eyeball, a super-powered right arm, and bionic legs capable of a top speed of 60 mph. Total cost: $6 million, or ...

  5. Oct 13, 2015 · The 2-part episode was so well received, that Lindsay Waggoner received her own series as a mid-season replacement during the airing of the third season of The Six Million Dollar Man.The Deadly ReplayThe PioneersThe Pal-Mir EscortNuclear AlertThe Seven Million Dollar Man (Introduction of SECOND Bionic Man)Return of the Robot MakerThe Bionic ...

  6. Feb 20, 2024 · The Origin of the Six Million Dollar Man Martin Caidin, in 1972, published Cyborg , a sci-fi novel that introduced the world to Steve Austin. Cyborg inspired the 1973 TV movie The Six Million Dollar Man (also known as “The Moon and the Desert”), followed by two additional TV movies, “Wine, Women and War” and “The Solid Gold Kidnapping ...

  7. The test pilot, Bruce Peterson, hit the ground at two hundred fifty miles per hour, tumbling six times. He lost use of his right eye following an infection, and had to stop flying, ending his career. Understandably, Peterson has said that he hated reliving his accident, week after week, courtesy of the show. Helpful • 84 3.

  1. People also search for