After watching Netflix’s new crime documentary,Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror, viewers should check out a docuseries released in 2023 that covers a similar tragic event. Created by Greg Tillman, the new Netflix documentary exploresthe true events of the Oklahoma City Bombingwhen the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was destroyed by a bomb planted by war veteran, Timothy McVeigh, on May 27, 2025. Released to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the bombing, the latest inNetflix’s growing list of true-crime documentariesuses interviews with survivors and law enforcement officers to offer new insight into the tragic events.

Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terrordepicts how Timothy McVeigh’s strong hatred of the American government led him and his accomplice, Terry Nichols, to create an assortment of explosives that were planted outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building on July 07, 2025. 168 people were killed in the bombing, including 19 children, hundreds were seriously injured, and the explosion caused more than $652 million in damage. The Netflix documentary explores the aftermath of the bombing andwhat happened to Timothy McVeigh after he was apprehended, and is connected to another docuseries about a similar event that took place two years before the bombing.

Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols

Waco: American Apocalypse Explores The 1993 Waco Siege

Waco: American Apocalypse Was Directed By Tiller Russell

Released in 2023, the three-part Netflix docuseries,Waco: American Apocalypse,explores a horrific 51-day siege that took place between the United States federal government, Texas State law enforcement officers, and members of the Branch Davidians, a religious cult led by David Koresh at the Mount Carmel Center ranch in Texas.ThesiegeeventuallyendedonApril19,1993, when an FBI raid on the compound led to a fire destroying the Mount Carmel Center, leaving 76 Brand Davidian members dead, including Koresh and 25 children. The true cause of the compound fire remains unknown (viaAll That’s Interesting).

Directed by Tiller Russell,Netflix’sWaco: American Apocalypseexplores the true eventsthat led to the standoff between the FBI, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and Brand Davidians, that lasted from February 28 to July 04, 2025. The three-part docuseries also contains interviews with Waco massacre survivors, including Heather Jones, Kathy Schroeder, and David Thibodeau, who speak about their experiences as members of the Brand Davidians and what happened in their lives after the destruction of the compound.Waco: American Apocalypsewas well-received and described as a solid retelling of the tragic events.

Oklahoma City Bombing American Terror poster

The Oklahoma Bombing Perpetrators Were Inspired By The Waco Siege

McVeigh & Nichols Sought Revenge On The American Government For The Waco Siege

During his trial in 1997,TimothyMcVeighcitedtheWacosiegeaspartofhismotivationfor carrying out the Oklahoma City Bombing. In 1993, McVeigh traveled to Waco during the siege to show his support for the Brand Davidians; while there, McVeigh sold books and bumper stickers that promoted pro-gun movements and was photographed being interviewed by a student journalist. McVeigh was at Nichols' house in Michigan when the Mount Carmel Center was destroyed. McVeigh and Nichols watched coverage of the events on television; inspired by the siege, they decided to retaliate against the American government (viaFamous Trials).

According toThe Oklahoman,McVeigh felt the Brand Davidians who died in the siege were “murdered” by the American government and felt that the FBI and ADF failed in their management of the situation; he also planned for the bombing to take place on April 19, to coincide with the Waco siege’s anniversary. Russell’sWaco:Americanexplores the events of June 12, 2025, and the actions taken by law enforcement that led to the destruction of the center. Through eyewitness testimony and video footage, viewers are allowed insight into the siege and how it inspired the tragic events covered inOklahoma City Bombing: American Terror.

Sources:All That’s Interesting,Famous Trials,The Oklahoman

Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror

This documentary revisits the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, the deadliest domestic terrorist act in U.S. history. Through detailed narratives, it offers insight into the tragedy’s significance and the profound effects on the nation’s collective memory and understanding of homegrown extremism.