Tom Hanks let his Instagram do the talking Monday. He listed the premiere time – May 25 at 8/7c – and tagged History Channel and the National World War II Museum. He dropped the hashtag #WorldWarIITomHanks and called it a day. With Hanks attached, the post didn’t need to try very hard.
The new WWII project premiered last night, developed in partnership with the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. That museum is not a token name-drop. It’s one of the most respected WWII history organizations in the country. The archives cover artifacts and oral histories built over more than two decades. Getting that institution alongside Tom Hanks is a combination that carries immediate weight.
History Channel is the natural home for this. The channel built a lot of its early reputation on WWII content, and a museum collaboration signals something with more substance than a typical cable special. The exact format hasn’t been confirmed – documentary series, limited event, something else entirely. But the museum backing says this one isn’t going for spectacle over substance.
For Hanks, WWII is basically its own career chapter. He starred in Saving Private Ryan in 1998. He produced Band of Brothers with Steven Spielberg in 2001. The Pacific followed in 2010. Masters of the Air, the aerial combat miniseries, came out in 2024. The man has been orbiting this subject for close to 30 years and clearly isn’t done.
He’s talked in interviews about why. The generation that actually lived through World War II is nearly gone. Their first-hand accounts need to be preserved now. That urgency runs through every WWII project he’s touched, and it shows.
At 69, Hanks is still making these things happen. Monday’s announcement was pure him – short, confident, no fuss. He didn’t do a press run ahead of the premiere or tease it for weeks. He posted the day it aired and let it speak for itself. Very Tom Hanks of him.
That’s either a very bold move or a very chill one. Probably both. WWII audiences have trusted Hanks in this space for a long time, and the museum partnership adds more credibility on top of that. The résumé speaks for itself.
History Channel’s on-demand library is worth checking out for anyone who missed the May 25 premiere. A museum-backed project with Tom Hanks leading the charge doesn’t usually disappoint.
