On Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:31:27 UTC, Michael Stemper wrote:
> ["Radiation is good for you"]
> I know that it is, or at least was, a common trope in super-hero
> comics, with both Superman and the Fantastic Four having
> radiation-derived powers. (In the 1960s, anyway. I have no idea
> what their current "secret origins" are.)
In Superman's case isn't it yellow-sun radiation? Which /is/ good
for you in moderation, in terms of Vitamin D (this isn't stuff that
I'm making up). But bad skin-cancer-wise.
However, instead of Superman perhaps you meant to say "almost
everybody else"; The Hulk, Daredevil, The X-Men some of the time
("The Children of the Atom"), other times it's due to a gene called
"The X-Factor", which went on to have its own comic... okay,
not exactly.
Having said that, it's pretty much a no for Batman, Wonder Woman,
Aquaman, The Flash, Green Lantern, Green Arrow, Blue Beetle,
Martian Manhunter, Plastic Man... I"m having trouble thinking of
any except for Superman villains who use Kryptonite as a biological
or mechanical energy source. Oh, and in that case Jimmy Olsen.
Also, in the 1960s Batman show that is currently playing on channel
ITV 4 in Britain, apparently the Bat-Cave and the Batmobile run on
atomic power, and Batman regularly plants a radioactive sample
on a prospective stolen object, or sidekick, in order to be able
later to detect them from clear across town, or indeed from
the Cave itself, 14 miles from the city. Now call me superstitious
and cowardly -
(This week I really thought the Penguin was going to successfully
dispose of Batman and Robin at the end of part one, by hiding a
couple of thugs with machine guns just out of sight to open fire
when they showed up. Penguin's girlfriend was gun-homicidal this
time, too. For a short while it was all surprisingly serious.)