12 television shows influenced by the Vietnam War
'Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.' (1964-1969)
'Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.' premiered on CBS six weeks after the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution authorized U.S. combat troops in Vietnam, and the daft comedy was among the chief images of the military in American homes through the peak of U.S. involvement in 1969. Naturally, the show about a country rube in the Marine Corps never directly mentioned the war. But most of the real-life Marines who marched in its introduction would soon be fighting in Vietnam. Star Jim Nabors later said watching that intro was difficult, knowing some of those men had died.
'All in the Family' (1971-1979)
It would take 'All in the Family' to bring the war into prime-time discourse. The Norman Lear-created CBS comedy owed its popularity to timely political bickering between cantankerous patriarch Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) and his liberal-minded son-in-law Michael 'Meathead' Stivic (Rob Reiner). Vietnam was the sole subject of a landmark 1976 episode where a draft-dodging fugitive friend of Michael's comes to Christmas dinner, and an explosive argument ensues. 'When the hell are you going to admit that the war was wrong?!' Michael shouts. A friend of Archie's whose son died in the war shocks him by taking his son-in-law's side.
'M(asterisk)A(asterisk)S(asterisk)H' (1972-1983)
Set in the Korean War of the early 1950s, 'M(asterisk)A(asterisk)S(asterisk)H,' the CBS dramedy about wisecracking U.S. Army doctors, was among the most popular shows in the country during the Vietnam War's final years. It was heavy with anti-military, anti-war sentiment, evoking the zeitgeist of a Vietnam-exhausted populace. 'War isn't Hell,' Hawkeye Pierce, played by Alan Alda, says in a typical line. 'There are no innocent bystanders in Hell, but war is chock full of them.' (The Robert Altman film the show stemmed from deliberately minimized references to Korea to maximize its unspoken commentary on Vietnam.)
'The A-Team' (1983-1987)
Television's first regular portrayal of Vietnam veterans came in the form of a cartoonish crew of daring mercenaries that reflected the era of Reagan and Rambo. NBC's 'The A-Team,' whose members included a mohawked-and-gold-chained Mr. T and a cigar-chomping George Peppard, were a 'crack commando unit' who were innocent fugitives from military justice and worked as mercenaries pulling off weekly capers. Explosions and jumping cars abounded. In a fourth-season episode, the team returns to Vietnam for a job. Peppard's Hannibal momentarily struggles with dark war memories before getting back to the lighthearted action.
'The Welcome Home Concert' (1987)
HBO aired and helped organize a 1987 charity concert dubbed 'Welcome Home' that billed itself as the warm celebration Vietnam War veterans never got upon their return. Performers included James Brown, Linda Ronstadt and Stevie Wonder. The July Fourth concert was not a militaristic affair, and had a hate-the-war, love-the-troops vibe. Some of the most anti-war songs of the '60s were performed by artists like John Fogerty and Crosby, Stills & Nash. The event would be a harbinger of a wave of cultural nostalgia and reckoning as baby boomers began turning 40 and were in the mood to reflect.
'Tour of Duty' (1987-1990)
With 'Tour of Duty,' the Vietnam War finally came to prime time. The CBS series that premiered in 1987 showed actual combat and the young men who fought and died in it. It might have been called 'Platoon: The Series,' after the Vietnam film that had just won best picture at the Oscars. Surprisingly gory and gritty for a network show, it had all the hallmarks of the era's many Vietnam movies. But executives seeking lower costs and higher ratings — which never came — eventually moved production from Hawaii to California and introduced romances and soapy plotlines typical of TV dramas.
'China Beach' (1988-1991)
And suddenly, there were two Vietnam series on TV. ABC's 'China Beach' was part-'M(asterisk)A(asterisk)S(asterisk)H,' part-'Grey's Anatomy,' part-'Mad Men.' Set in a wartime evacuation hospital — the title was the Americans' nickname for My Khe Beach in Đà Nẵng — it focused on Army medics and civilians. It was festooned with '60s songs whose copyrights have kept the series off streaming services. Beloved by critics, 'China Beach' made a star and a best-actress Emmy winner of Dana Delany, but never found a mass audience. With its cancellation, network TV depictions of the war would disappear for years.
'The Wonder Years' (1988-1993)
'The Wonder Years' was baby boomer nostalgia in its purest form. The ABC series, narrated by an adult Kevin Arnold (voiced by Daniel Stern, played as a child by Fred Savage), depicts his boyhood feelings and experiences with the backing of sentimental '60s songs. The specter of Vietnam dominates its first season, which sees Kevin's hero — the big brother of his neighbor and crush Winnie Cooper — die in the war. In a 2021 reboot, the story shifts to a Black family in Alabama, with narrator Dean Williams' brother a returning Vietnam vet who faces racism at home.
'The '60s' (1999)
The NBC miniseries 'The '60s' was a roundup of the decade's cliches that by then had been well-established in movies and TV. The 1999 two-night event was billed as 'the movie event of a generation.' Its subjects were three Chicago siblings who each go on very 1960s journeys. For Jerry O'Connell's high-school quarterback character, that meant serving in Vietnam. He enlists in a gung-ho moment, but by the show's second night, he's back home with an Army jacket and long hair, drinking to bury his trauma. The show drew a big audience at a time when NBC was ratings king.
'This Is Us' (2016-2022)
The time-hopping, tear-jerking NBC family drama 'This Is Us' used the Vietnam War to delve into the psyche of Jack Pearson (Milo Ventimiglia), who refused to talk about his experience as a soldier with his wife and kids before his premature death. In dual plotlines that run through its third season, with the emotional themes and folk-acoustic soundtrack that are hallmarks of 'This Is Us,' Jack is shown enlisting to try to protect his drafted younger brother. Decades later, his son Kevin (Justin Hartley) travels to Vietnam to find out what happened to his father and uncle.
'The Vietnam War' (2017)
In a docuseries that ran over 10 nights on PBS, the Vietnam War got the same hallowed treatment Ken Burns brought nearly 30 years earlier to the Civil War. Burns and Lynn Novick's 'The Vietnam War' was not as soft or sentimental as his reputation might have suggested. It was a rare PBS show with a TV-MA rating, and its tone, with a modern soundtrack from composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, matched the messiness of the conflict. The show went to lengths to include a North Vietnamese perspective along with American and South Vietnamese vets and historians.
'The Sympathizer' (2024)
It took until 2024 before a fictional television show would attempt a Vietnamese perspective of the war's end and its aftermath, though it brought mixed reactions from Vietnamese American viewers. HBO's 'The Sympathizer' was based on Viet Thanh Nguyen's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. The first two episodes of the black-comic limited series depict a harrowing flight during the fall of Saigon. Actors of Vietnamese descent played most of its main roles, including lead Hoa Xuande. But much of the attention given to it — and its only Emmy nomination — went to Robert Downey Jr. for his portrayal of four different white American men.
___
For more coverage of the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War's end, visit https://apnews.com/hub/vietnam-war.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Singer Victoria Canal accuses ‘powerful, decades-older man' of sexual abuse, grooming in lengthy instagram post
Spanish-American singer Victoria Canal has accused a 'very powerful' man in the music industry of sexually abusing and grooming her eight years ago. Canal shared the shocking allegations in a lengthy Instagram post. 5 Victoria Canal attends the 'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning' premiere in NYC on May 18, 2025. WireImage 'This is something I've never spoken about publicly, and have been holding for 8 years now – it has plagued my body, spirit, and mind, in subliminal and overt ways, for my entire 20s,' Canal began on Aug. 11. 'It was only earlier this year, when I was assaulted by a stranger in a rehearsal space, that something in my subconscious awoke (including many buried memories) and helped me start to understand the effects of what happened to me,' the 'June Baby' singer continued. 5 Victoria Canal has accused a 'very powerful' man in the music industry of sexually abusing and grooming her eight years ago. Victoria Canal / Instagram 'Today, on my 27th birthday, I am choosing my own freedom by sharing this with you all,' Canal added. 'I am letting it out, to be able to let it go. This decision feels so right in my body.' Canal, who was born without the lower half of her right arm, alleged that a 'very powerful' and 'decades-older man' took advantage of her when she was just 19. Although she would not mention her alleged abuser by name out of fear of retaliation, the pop star described him as someone who appears to be a 'loving, charismatic and principled' family man with a 'very active career.' 'However, behind closed doors, this person has a history of incredibly damaging behavior across the board, and has a team of enablers around him who have fiercely protected his image, perpetuating this behavior for decades,' the 'Cake' singer wrote. 5 Victoria Canal shared the shocking allegations in a lengthy Instagram post. Victoria Canal / Instagram After taking Canal under his wing, the alleged perpetrator purportedly began to touch and take pictures of the pop star without her consent. 'These behaviors progressed over a year, slowly keeping me more isolated in a highly unfamiliar and contained environment,' Canal alleged further. 'At the time, this person made me believe that if I ever told anyone what he was doing, my career would be over before it started.' Following 'a little over a year' of the alleged sexual abuse and grooming, Canal's purported abuser 'verbally admitted' that getting her 'in this position had been his plan all along.' 5 Victoria Canal at the Los Angeles County Fair on May 3, 2025. Getty Images for The Recording Academy Although Canal admitted that her world 'ruptured,' and it has been a 'long and evolving journey in reclaiming my emotional and spiritual health,' she shared that therapy, psychedelic treatment, talking with other men and women, and making art have helped her recover. Canal, who has been professionally linked to Coldplay's Chris Martin in recent years, also clarified that her alleged abuser was 'not among the mentors who have championed me since I got signed to a major label in 2022.' 5 Victoria Canal performs at the Neighborhood Theatre in Charlotte, North Carolina, on May 19, 2025. Getty Images 'These men have actually been a healing force in my life in being able to understand that not all people in positions of power abuse it,' the 'California Sober' singer wrote. 'These mentors have, among others, shown me that healthy mentorship does exist, there are men that wholly want to help, and I am so eternally grateful for that lesson.' 'Please don't entangle those people with this person,' Canal added. The Post has reached out to Canal's rep for comment.


Buzz Feed
5 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
19 Aspects Of American Culture That People Love
Listen, as an American, I KNOW there's a whole lot about the US to criticize and hate on. However, amid all the chaos, Americans reflected on what they still appreciate when I recently asked them to share what they love about the US — and their responses were eye-opening: "Bulk shopping and huge refrigerators. I don't have the social battery to do daily grocery shopping, and honestly, having to be among people twice a month is too much for me." —certified_drapetomaniac "I'm from the Midwest and have been living in England for the past three years. I miss the friendliness of Midwesterners! The last time I flew home, an airline worker got onto the plane after we got to the gate and welcomed us, and I almost started crying. I really miss the American friendliness when I'm abroad." "Chicago pizza. Give me a pizza with sausage and pepperoni cut into squares in a white bag with the Italian boot on the front, a side of garlic bread, and a Diet Coke. No other pizza compares to Chicago pizza. None. The other thing I love is pro-wrestling." —Dani, Illinois "The diversity. There are so many different types of people and cultures. It is truly a blessing to be able to interact with people who are different from you and learn how they live within the same confined systematic society as you, but in their own culture and heritage. You really gain a sense of appreciation for all types of people from different backgrounds." "Halloween, specifically trick-or-treating as a kid. It was truly magical, and I feel bad for those who don't get to experience it." —Summer, 28, New York "Snark. Americans are very snarky, especially when upset. Approved." "I have lived and worked in multiple countries. It does get obnoxious at times, but I do love our weird patriotism. We put our flags out all year long, set off fireworks for every holiday, and organize parades at the drop of a hat. I'm proud to be an American, and I'm glad that my fellow citizens feel just as proud and want to celebrate it." —Jeff, 45, North Carolina "I like the variety. There isn't a single 'American' culture, so much as it's a myriad of cultures based on ethnicity, location, economic status, and age. American culture in the South is almost entirely different from American culture in the West, yet they are both equally valid as American culture." "American bathrooms. We Americans enjoy spacious bathrooms in our homes, including having nice toilets and large showers." —bougiedolphin567 "I have lived all over the US and the world. One thing about American culture that is noted all over the world is Americans' positive, upbeat, 'can-do' attitude — which I dearly love. We invent, we innovate, and we create. We start little companies that become global giants; we put men on the moon, put super-computers in everyone's pockets, and catch falling rockets in mid-air. We are amazing!" "Air conditioning everywhere. I also like that smoking is usually frowned upon, there's free water, and there are free public restrooms." —Anonymous, 24, New York "I actually like that we as a culture are comfortable running errands in sweats, and sometimes even pajamas. We get a lot of shit for it, but I appreciate that, in general, folks aren't full of judgment, seeing someone getting groceries in their 'lazy' clothes. We all have a lot going on, and some of us have sensory issues resulting in formal clothes making us want to tear our skin off. I like that I can run to the store in a messy bun and yoga pants and not have people stare at me for being under-dressed. Oh, and having legal, recreational weed (although that varies by state). Love it." "You can publicly refer to the president as 'King Baby the Whiny Little Bitch,' and you don't have to fear getting arrested or jailed for doing so. (This is under the assumption that King Baby the Whiny Little Bitch won't change freedom of speech.)" —Anonymous "We have always been the adolescents of world cultures and have always had the guts to address what doesn't align with our beliefs. Whatever label you put on that, the USA has always been passionate about its place and role in the entire world. And whether you agree or disagree with what is said or being done to reinforce our legitimacy as a nation, you cannot deny that we have always struggled through our growth as a young country. We've had our eyes on the prize and have largely shown the world that our revolution shaped how everyone else lives, with entertainment being the most decisive thing. Until recent events, I always considered our culture worthy of being defended, not because everyone else wants to be like us, but because we allow anyone, whosoever, to join the party." "Sports culture. I'm a huge Eagles fan, and I love that no matter where I go, if I see someone wearing Eagles gear, I have no trouble saying, 'Go Birds.' People do that to me all the time as well. This past year, my wife and I went to Punta Cana for our fifth anniversary, and I brought an Eagles hat. Random groups of people would just yell out random Eagles chants to me. My wife got mad that we woke her up from a nap." —flyerboy6 "I like a lot about American culture, but a specific one for my stage in life is college culture. It seems more fun and unique than other places, especially if you go to a big football or basketball school. The atmosphere and parties are amazing." "The fact that America is truly a melting pot, despite some trying to make it otherwise. You can really see it in the food culture. If you live in pretty much any semi-large metropolitan area, you can experience very genuine and culturally accurate cuisines from many different cultures: Indian, Mexican, Asian, Middle can really try it all. In many other countries, you are very limited. If you're in Italy, for example, the food is amazing, but you are by and large limited to only Italian fare." —Rob, 54, Ohio "I hate the reason for them, but I still love going to firework shows! The ones by me are wildly beautiful, and it's so nice that the whole community comes out to watch — not to mention the live music and food trucks!" Lastly: "I like how Americans band together. It may seem extremely divisive now, but Americans know how to organize when times get tough and they're passionate about something. Many Americans now, like some of my family members, seem to forget what America was built on. But once the dust clears, I strongly believe that our modern revolution will come. It may be slow, it may be frustrating, and we may need to hit rock bottom before things get better, but it will come. We Americans are resilient and headstrong, and true patriots will defend our democracy for as long as we can." As someone who recently traveled to Europe, I'm VERY appreciative of America's air conditioning and free water. If you're an American (or even a non-American!), what do you actually like about American culture? Let us know in the comments, or you can anonymously submit your thoughts using the form below!


Time Magazine
6 hours ago
- Time Magazine
Taylor Swift's Album Release is Quintessential Swiftynomics
On Aug. 12, Taylor Swift announced her 12th original studio album, The Life of a Showgirl and a sparkly orange era on her website. This news spread like a ray of golden sunshine, cutting through some bleak headlines for women. The Bureau of Labor Statistics lost its female leader because President Donald Trump did not like the published jobs numbers. And as TIME reported, this labor market data also revealed that women are leaving the labor market in droves The next day on New Heights, Jason and Travis Kelce's podcast, Taylor complimented Travis' sweatshirt. 'Thanks, sweetie, it's the color of your eyes,' responded Travis, sending Swifties into a tailspin. Finally, Swift revealed more details. Her album will be released on Oct. 3 and she shared its artwork and tracklist. The announcement is not just a reflection of modern American gender dynamics, but a masterclass in modern advertising. Read More: Everything We Know So Far About Taylor Swift's 'The Life of a Showgirl' In less than 24 hours, everything turned orange. Everyone, and I mean everyone, was in on it. The Empire State Building, New York Times Square, and the Kansas City Union Station lit up in orange lights Tuesday evening. M&Ms, Playdoh, and Sesame Street came out to play, flouting orange and the number 12 in honor of Taylor Swift's twelfth album. The Olive Garden flashed a garlic bread turned showgirl in honor of the era's new album title. Petco brought out Meredith, Taylor's cat, in an orange haze. Even Aquaphor hand lotion showed up in sparkle. The list of brands getting in on the mania went on and on. Orange became the new social marketing technique. Business classes in universities across the nation will ponder Taylor's successful grip on our psyche. With the economy-moving Eras Tour behind us, companies had caught on to Swift's success even if they could not understand how she had done it. They were grasping for the attention of Taylor's fans, riding the coattails of her brand. But what is Taylor's brand? 'I am in the business of human emotion,' said Swift while discussing her decision to buy back her music catalog from the private equity firm Shamrock Capital with Jason and Travis. 'I would so much rather lead heart-first in something like this.' Not music, not entertainment, not writing, but human emotion. And though Swift maintains she has not made such business decisions because of the projected returns or dividends, her emotion-focused approach has still been key to her success. Throughout her career, Swift has remained true to herself and invested in getting to know and understand her audience. She builds her product around human emotions—hers and ours. The day before the announcement, I had been working with a librarian discussing how to build research muscle among a new class of incoming freshmen who would be taking my new class, The Academic Lore of Taylor Swift. The librarian began telling me she came to the fandom late, that the romance between Taylor and Travis really drew her in because it gave her so much joy to watch. Read More: The History of Music Copyright—Before (Taylor's Version) More than a million listeners tuned in to the New Heights podcasts the night of Swift's announcement. The emotional tug of a new announcement or any crumb of new information into the life of the artist had a magnetic pull far and wide. Human emotion sells. In critical, historical moments like the one we are in now, where immigrants are being unfairly targeted by the federal government, inequality is ever increasing, and moms cannot catch a break in the labor market, it sells even more. As advertisers continue paying attention to who's controlling the market today, they'll look to megastar influencers like Taylor Swift and latch themselves to her sparkly orange belt. She will, in turn, look to her fans who are more than happy to dig deep into their pockets for a chance to experience the human emotions she's selling, whether via CD, vinyl, cassette, and any other form. Maybe all of her fans won't buy the orange Playdoh, but they will buy the music that she ever-so-delicately, perfectly, and precisely laid out to a sound track—and they will devour it. She'll make them happy in what might be seen as otherwise depressing times. This is what I call 'Swiftynomics.' It is women's ability to dominate consumption and marketing patterns by harnessing their human experiences for economic benefit. It is women investing in one another, and it thrives today, even in these challenging times. A business built on human emotions is a smart, strategic business plan. An economy which thrives off of the emotions, and realities, of deeply authentic women is an economy we should all want to build together, in this era and the next. If that is what Taylor is selling, then sign me up.