Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman
All season 1 mistakesMistakes
Show generally1
1Pilot1
2Strange Visitor (From Another Planet)0
3Neverending Battle0
4I'm Looking Through You0
5Requiem for a Superhero0
6I've Got a Crush on You0
7Smart Kids0
8The Green, Green Glow of Home0
9The Man of Steel Bars1
10Pheromone, My Lovely0
11Honeymoon in Metropolis0
12All Shook Up0
13Witness0
14Illusions of Grandeur0
15The Ides of Metropolis0
16Foundling0
17The Rival0
18Vatman0
19Fly Hard0
20Barbarians at the Planet0
21The House of Luthor0

The Man of Steel Bars - S1-E9

Other mistake: Throughout the episode, including the very first shot, we see the sun is shining brighter and hotter than usual. This lends credibility to the theory that Superman's powers are responsible for increased solar activity. Later on in the episode it is revealed that the heatwave is being orchestrated by Lex Luthor, who is is heating an underground river to coincide with Superman using his powers. Lex does not however have any control of the weather, and no explanation is offered for why the weather conveniently 'played along' with his plan.

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Tempus: Oh please, I'll go to jail, I'll strap myself into the electric chair, just don't make me listen to this.

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Trivia: Had the show carried on for a fifth season, it would have been revealed that the baby that was given to Lois and Clark was actually Kryptonian royalty and was given to them to protect the baby from assassins.

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Show generally

Question: Whenever Clark uses his X-ray vision, why does he lower his glasses? Lowering them when he uses heat vision is understandable but there's no need to do it when Clark uses X-ray vision.

Answer: I don't recall if it was ever mentioned in an episode, but it's possible that the frames and/or lenses of his glasses are lined with lead, the one compound his X-ray vision can't penetrate. Speculative, of course, but it likely would have been done at a point in his youth when he wasn't in complete control of his powers.

Cubs Fan

I think the other answer has good speculation. I would add it could also just be an "acting gesture" that Dean Cain utilizes as part of his Superman character and not because there's any practical reason. That way, the audience immediately recognizes what he is doing.

raywest

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