
“For All Mankind” has just returned for its fifth season, continuing its ambitious mission to reimagine the Space Race.
Having started out with the unexpected sight of the Soviet Union planting its flag on the Moon, the hit Apple TV series has given us a vastly accelerated version of humanity’s exploration of the cosmos. The show had already taken us to the Moon and Mars by the mid-1990s, and now — as its fictional timeline reaches 2012 — a fully-fledged Martian colony is trying to exploit the riches of a nearby asteroid.
Below, we detail the entire “For All Mankind” timeline, from that first lunar landing through to the start of season 5 — and compare the fiction with what happened in real life. And with a sixth and final season already confirmed, we’ll be updating this feature as the show’s alternative history progresses.
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In real life (IRL): Armstrong and Aldrin were the famously the first people to set foot on the Moon. Leonov completed the first spacewalk in 1965. The USSR sent the first woman into space, Valentina Tereshkova, in 1963.
IRL: No women ever flew in the Apollo program, though the show does make the point that Patty Doyle and Molly Cobb (both fictional) were Mercury 13 astronaut trainees several years earlier. The Vietnam War didn’t actually end until 1975.
IRL: Molly Cobb was inspired by real-life Mercury 13 trainee Jerrie Cobb, though no American woman would fly in space until Sally Ride in 1983. Observations suggest that the Shackleton Crater (located near the lunar south pole) may contain ice.
IRL: Nixon (Republican) was re-elected in 1972. Kennedy was widely tipped for America’s top office until the Chappaquiddick incident in 1969 derailed his political career. He served as senator for Massachusetts from 1962 until his death in 2009.
IRL: The final Apollo mission, Apollo 17, departed the lunar surface in December 1972. No human has visited the Moon since, though NASA’s Artemis program is planning to change that very soon…
IRL: Slayton did belatedly fly on the joint US/Soviet Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975, and passed away in 1993. Gene Kranz is still alive, aged 92. The Soviet Union has yet to land any humans on the Moon. Nixon was given a presidential pardon, but by Gerald Ford rather than Kennedy.
IRL: Jimmy Carter (Democrat) was elected President in 1976 — it would be four more years before Reagan entered the White House.
IRL: The Soviet Union would be at war with Afghanistan for a decade before the conflict ended in 1989. The Three Mile Island nuclear facility in Pennsylvania famously suffered a partial meltdown in 1979.
IRL: Enterprise was the name given to the Shuttle prototype, though it never flew in space — Columbia was the first actual Shuttle.
Reagan won his first term in 1980. Lennon died, but Pope John Paul II survived. Prince (now King) Charles married Princess Diana in 1981, but later married Camilla Parker Bowles (the current Queen) in 2005.
IRL: NASA recently announced plans for a spacecraft that will use nuclear electric propulsion (NEP) to travel to Mars. President Reagan announced the orbital Strategic Defense Initiative, nicknamed Star Wars, in 1984.
In a rare case of real-life beating “For All Mankind” to the punch, the Apollo-Soyuz mission actually took place eight years earlier. Tragically, Korean Airlines Flight 007 really was shot down over the Sea of Japan.
IRL: According to the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, no country can “own” the Moon. Gary Hart was defeated by President Reagan in the 1984 election. Margaret Thatcher survived the 1984 Brighton bombing and lived until 2013.
IRL: Manmade nuclear fusion reactors remain in the realms of science fiction. Space tourism is still the domain of the super-rich.
IRL: NASA now frequently collaborates with private partners. China’s first human spaceflight didn’t take place until 2003, while North Korea reportedly reached space in 2024. The Beatles’ last live concert was their famous rooftop gig in 1969.
IRL: George HW Bush (Republican) defeated Michael Dukakis (Democrat) in the 1988 presidential election.
IRL: The Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990, and named after American astronomer Edwin Hubble. The James Webb Space Telescope, launched in 2021, was named after James Webb, administrator of NASA from 1961-1968.
IRL: Orbital hotels are still some way off. Bill Clinton won the 1992 election, beating the incumbent George HW Bush — Wilson is the first fictional character to become President in “For All Mankind”‘s alternative timeline.
IRL: Sojourner was the name of the Mars rover launched as part of NASA’s Pathfinder mission, launched in 1996. In real life, the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
IRL: Some 30 years after “For All Mankind” achieved the feat, landing on Mars remains on NASA’s to-do list — though Artemis will hopefully bring this giant leap closer to reality. No child has yet been born in space.
IRL: A Pulsed Plasma Rocket (PPR) is under development, though it does feel like it’s been added to “For All Mankind”‘s mythology for narrative expedience, in order to make travel time between planets that little bit shorter. Hilton is yet to announce plans for hotels beyond Earth.
IRL: Massachusetts became the first US state to legalize same-sex marriage in 2004. Bill and Hillary Clinton are still married.
IRL: Weinstein wasn’t arrested for his numerous crimes until 2018. John F Kennedy Jr died in a plane crash in 1999.
IRL: Al Gore lost to George HW Bush’s son, George W Bush, in the 2000 presidential election. The infamous Y2K caused rather fewer issues than doom-mongers predicted, though it did prove lucrative for IT professionals.
IRL: The Cold War had been over for a decade by 2001. U2 played the Super Bowl halftime show.
IRL: Iridium has many practical applications (including spark plugs and the aerospace industry) and is often more abundant in asteroids than in the Earth’s crust. Moving an asteroid may be a little bit beyond us for now, however.
IRL: President George W Bush defeated John Kerry (Democrat) to win a second term. The Boston Red Sox won the World Series for the first time since 1918, ending the curse.
IRL: Jay-Z actually performed with Paul McCartney at the 2006 Grammy Awards.
IRL: Little did Blockbuster know that its whole world was about to get turned upside-down. Netflix had launched its by-mail DVD rental service in 1997, and transitioned into streaming in 2007. The company then moved into original content with 2012’s “Lilyhammer”, though such a plan would have seemed crazy in 2007. Blockbuster went out of business in 2014.
IRL: The Space Shuttle Endeavour made a similar journey in 2012, though it is currently away from public view.
New episodes of “For All Mankind” debut on Apple TV+ on Fridays.






