An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Nov. 12, 2008

TroopTube gives morale boost to deployed servicemembers

By Gerry J. Gilmore American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON - Overseas-deployed servicemembers can receive video "shout-outs" from home, as well as senior-leader messages, thanks to the new TroopTube online information service, according to military officials.

TroopTube is a new Web site managed by the Defense Department's Military OneSource online information network. It is patterned after YouTube, the popular commercial video site, said Gail Lobisone, who works with Military OneSource at U.S. Army Family, Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command in Alexandria, Va. It can be accessed at www.trooptube.tv/home.

Each armed service manages a MilitaryOneSource.com site that connects servicemembers and families to assistance programs that deal with moving, finances, deployment, childcare and other military-life issues.

The TroopTube concept is right for the times, Lobisone said during a Nov. 14 interview with the Pentagon Channel. Today's soldiers, she said, "like the ability to connect through technology."

TroopTube is expected to raise troop morale by providing near-real-time communication to loved ones back home, said Army Col. Brick T. Miller, U.S. Army Family, Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command's deputy commander and chief of staff. The in-house communications system, he added, also helps the military to conserve Internet bandwidth.

Deployed servicemembers can access TroopTube to view their children's stateside high school graduations, birthdays and other notable family events, Miller said. Single soldiers, he added, can keep current with parents, siblings and friends back home.

Sites like TroopTube exemplify and provide "what the younger soldiers want today to be able to communicate with their families," Miller said. TroopTube helps to ease the minds of overseas-deployed servicemembers, he said, while helping family members stay in touch.

"We see it as a way of lowering the stress level," Miller said. "This is a way of getting closer to real-time gratification, which is what the Millennium Generation is used to."

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Air National Guard service members assigned to the 152nd Fighter Squadron Aircraft Maintenance Unit load munitions to an F-16 Fighter Falcon during the annual Weapons Load Competition at Morris Air National Guard Base, Arizona, May 1, 2026. The 152nd Aircraft Maintenance Unit is a specialized team responsible for servicing, launching, recovering and maintaining aircraft to ensure operational readiness. Photo by Staff Sgt. Guadalupe Beltran.
Arizona Guard Strengthens Lethality At Weapons Load Competition
By Staff Sgt. Guadalupe Beltran, | May 26, 2026
MORRIS AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, Ariz. – Airmen assigned to the Arizona National Guard’s 162nd Wing demonstrated combat readiness, precision and lethality during the annual Weapons Load Crew Competition May 1.The event...

U.S. Army Soldiers attending Basic Leader Course conducted by the 166th Regiment - Regional Training Institute participate in field training during validation of the Army’s new 29-day Basic Leader Course program at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, May 19-20, 2026. The updated course increases tactical field training and leadership evaluations designed to prepare junior noncommissioned officers for team and squad-level leadership roles. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Shane Smith.
Pennsylvania Guard Helps Shape Army’s Extended Basic Leader Course
By Sgt. 1st Class Shane Smith, | May 22, 2026
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. – The Pennsylvania National Guard’s 166th Regiment - Regional Training Institute, or RTI, is serving as the Army National Guard’s validation site for the Army’s new 29-day Basic Leader Course, or BLC,...

U.S. Army National Guard Soldiers with Kentucky's Bravo Battery, 1st Battalion, 623rd Field Artillery Regiment fire a rocket from a High-Mobility Artillery Tocket System at Fort Irwin, California, April 24, 2026. During the rotation, Soldiers train to operate with greater speed, precision and coordination under realistic battlefield conditions to sharpen overall combat readiness. Photo by Spc. Marissa Keith.
Kentucky Guard Enhances Lethality at Arcane Thunder
By Spc. Marissa Keith, | May 22, 2026
FORT IRWIN, Calif. – Soldiers of Kentucky National Guard’s B Battery, 1st Battalion, 623rd Field Artillery, 38th Infantry Division Artillery, conducted annual training at Fort Irwin, during a larger, multi-layer exercise...