In the "I Dream of Jeannie" Episode; Season 3, Episode 13: My Son, The Genie. POTUS visits Maj. Nelson's home. The President is shown twice, from behind only, wearing a western hat, implying it is LBJ, who was president at the time.
In the sketch comedy show The Whitest Kids U'Know Johnson is portrayed by Sam Brown, and is shown encouraging the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
In an episode of The Venture Bros., Johnson and his wife "Lady Hawk" appear as super villains.
Johnson appeared as an animated caricature of himself in an episode of The Flintstones entitled, "Shinrock A Go-Go", that originally aired on December 3, 1965.
Lyndon B. Johnson is portrayed as a preserved talking head in a jar in an episode of the series Futurama.
Books
In the Odd Thomas series of novels by
Dean Koontz, Johnson appears as one of the famous ghosts that haunt the titular character's home town of Pico Mundo, still wearing the hospital gown he had on when he died. When Johnson realizes Odd can see him, he responds by mooning him.
In the short story collection Girl With Curious Hair by
David Foster Wallace, the piece entitled "Lyndon" describes a large extent of Johnson's political career through his interactions with the narrator, an administrative assistant who rises to become a senior staff member and close friend of Johnson's.
In Kevin Given's novel "Last Rites: The Return of Sebastian Vasilis" Lyndon Johnson is turned into a vampire. The novel was adapted into a series of comic books "Karl Vincent; Vampire Hunter" and "Files of Karl Vincent" Files of Karl Vincent #1 tells how Lyndon became a vampire.
The War Game (1966): never directly named, but shown in photographs when narration references the President of the United States.
In 1968
Ward Kimball directed a two-minute animated short called Escalation, which criticized
Lyndon B. Johnson's
Vietnam War policy by portraying him as a giant head whose
phallic nose rise to erection until it explodes. The short is unique for being the only animated cartoon made independently from the
Disney Studios by one of
Disney's Nine Old Men. The short is further noticeable for its satirical edge and political and erotic content.[3][4]