Soon to join a growing list of television characters on the
autism spectrum is Jake Bohm, an 11-year-old boy with an extreme form of autism
who is also nonverbal. Portrayed by David Mazouz, Jake’s character is at the
center of a new show called Touch on FOX.
Jake is the son of Keifer Sutherland’s (24) Martin Bohm, a widower and single father who struggles to
connect with his son. As characteristic of many children with autism, Jake does
not allow himself to be touched and exhibits very little emotion. A social worker
assigned to the family tells Martin that his attempts to communicate with Jake
are simply attempts at “wish fulfillment.” Just when the state is about to
intervene, Martin realizes that Jake possesses a gift where he can see things
no one else can"mainly the patterns that connect everything in life"and his way
of communicating is with numbers. It is up to Martin to decipher the meaning of
the numbers and find the people whose lives they affect.
The show’s creator, Tim Kring (Heroes), may have created Jake’s character based on his knowledge
and experiences with his own son with autism. The show explores the definition
of what autism is, and Kring can be expected to ensure that Touch’s fictional aspects are based in
scientific fact.
Danny Glover (Lethal
Weapon) plays a professor on Touch
who believes that Jake is proof that autism is really a heightened ability and
not a disability. Sutherland tells TVLine
that “The
Danny Glover character is interesting . . . He believes that we have
misdiagnosed a group of people that actually are at a much more advanced form
of communication, but because we don’t understand it we’ve diagnosed them with
what we can best understand.”
Jake joins the characters Max on Parenthood and Abed on Community
as some of the more prominent representations on television of people on the
spectrum. FOX will air a preview episode of Touch
on January 25 right after American Idol.
The series officially debuts March 19.
Read more here.