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BEAVERTON, OR (WCMH) — For $10 you can own a pair of the self-tying shoes, but you’ll have to get lucky because Nike is only releasing a limited number of the “Back to the Future” shoes.
“Back to the Future: Part II” has had fans waiting in anticipation for the technology of the future for decades, like hoverboards, flying cars, and self-lacing shoes. Unfortunately, none of these ...
Movie-goers have been anticipating them for even longer: Marty McFly, the time-warped teenager played by Michael J. Fox in Back to the Future Part II, famously had self-tying shoes.
NEW YORK -- "Back to the Future" fans can soon wear self-lacing sneakers similar to the ones worn by Marty McFly in the 1989 movie. Nike has unveiled the first adaptive lacing shoe - HyperAdapt 1.0.
Untied shoes have even become a fashion trend. Nike released a special edition Back to the Future sneaker shoe back in 2016, though they do not tie themselves. These shoes resell for $18,000-$200,000.
Nike discontinues self-lacing 'Back to the Future' shoes and removes app from App Store, Google Play News By Dave LeClair published 5 July 2024 The app is being removed but there's still hope for ...
“I’m Out. Fuck ’Em.” Some may be unsurprised that Nike's attempt at commercializing the shoes from Back to the Future Part II has run into a wall.
“I’m out.” Some may be unsurprised that Nike's attempt at commercializing the shoes from Back to the Future Part II has run into a wall.
There’s a scene in the movie “Back to the Future II” where Marty McFly gets a glimpse of technologies to come: hoverboards; flat-screen TVs; self-drying clothes and self-tying shoes.
When the movie Back to the Future Part II came out in 1989, the screenwriters had to imagine the world in 2015. The resulting movie shows a world with fax machines, self-tying shoes, and hover boards ...
There's nothing quite like the feeling of putting on your self-lacing Nike shoes that you spent $350 on and just knowing they work. The app provides all the custom adjustments you need via ...