The "Stand in the Schoolhouse Door" is featured in the 1994 film
Forrest Gump. The video sequence depicting this event is edited to make it appear that the film's lead character was part of the event. The movie also showed footage of the attempted assassination of Wallace, which also was shown in the
Oliver Stone film
Nixon.
Drive-By Truckers released two songs on its
2001 album
Southern Rock Opera referring to life of George Wallace, entitled "The Three Great Alabama Icons" and "Wallace." Both songs deal heavily with his pro-segregationist views and how the state of Alabama, and the South as a whole, were seen because of his influence.
In the
Charlie Daniels song "Uneasy Rider," a hippie driving through the South tries to talk his way out of being beaten up by a group of rednecks by accusing one of his would-be attackers of faking his redneck credentials: "Would you believe this man has gone as far as tearing Wallace stickers off the bumpers of cars? And he voted for George McGovern for President."
In its August 1972 issue,
National Lampoon magazine ran an article called "Tales from the South," a parody of
Tales from the Crypt and a satirical take on Wallace's political career, written by
Michael O'Donoghue and illustrated by Don Perlin.
The play
A Christmas Carol for George Wallace was produced by the
Cripple Creek Theatre Company in
New Orleans, Louisiana.
One page in the satirical book
America (The Book) features mock campaign stickers, poking fun at various Presidential candidates. A sticker for Wallace has, in large print, "Wallace in '68" and then in much smaller print "Because otherwise, in four years, Nixon's boys will be caught breaking into the Watergate office trying to sabotage their opponents, creating unprecedented scandal and ushering in an era of cynicism that will shape politics for decades to come. Call it a hunch. Again, Wallace in '68".
Famous comedian
Bill Cosby mentions Wallace in his album
200 M.P.H.. During most of the title track, he talked about a sports car that he got from
Carroll Shelby as a present and a "near death" experience driving the car. After expressing his fear over the car, he told the man "Take the keys and this car, it's all paid for, and you give it to George Wallace."
Paula Fox's novel
Desperate Characters references Wallace. On Sophie and Otto's drive through Queens to their house in Flynders, a campaign poster is mentioned: "The face of an Alabama presidential candidate stared with sooty dead eyes from his campaign posters, claiming the territory as his own.
His country, warned the poster — vote for him — pathology calling tenderly to pathology." Fox confirms that it is a reference to Wallace in an interview with Bomb magazine.
In the
science-fiction novel
Yellow Eyes by
John Ringo, a
UH-60 Black Hawk crew chief, Sergeant Wallace from Alabama, sacrifices himself to allow the black national security advisor to escape the invading Posleen, his parting words being "Alabama is raht proud of you, ma'am." According to the Black Hawk pilot, "Sergeant Wallace is not 'that' Wallace. 'That' Wallace died years ago."
Comedian
Dan Naturman has a joke in his stand-up act about George Wallace as a weatherman: "Precipitation now, precipitation tomorrow, precipitation forever."
"Sweet Home Alabama" is a song by Southern rock band
Lynyrd Skynyrd that first appeared in 1974 on their second album,
Second Helping. The memorable lines "In Birmingham, they love the governor,
Now we all did what we could do" as well as "Sweet home Alabama, Oh sweet home baby, Where the skies are so blue, And the governor's true" are all widely interpreted to be references to Governor Wallace, and his attempt to enforce and defend segregation (which, though a failure, was still in keeping with his earlier promises).