Decision 2010 Election Coverage
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On Tonight

7:00 PM

General Series "Washington Week with Gwen Ifill and National Journal"

GENERAL SERIES

Washington Week with Gwen Ifill and National Journal

PBS' longest-running public affairs series features Washington's top journalists analyzing the week's top news stories and their effect on the lives of all Americans. Gwen Ifill hosts.

7:30 PM

Wyoming Chronicle "Jalan Crossland"

WYOMING CHRONICLE

Jalan Crossland

Jalan Crossland: Jalan has been called Wyoming’s ‘trailerpark troubadour.’ He brings his left-handed six-string banjo to an interview with Margaret Benson.

8:00 PM

Need to Know "Episode 113"

NEED TO KNOW

Episode 113

PBS's new TV and Web newsmagazine gives you what you need to know -- along with a healthy dose of insight, perspective and wit. Need to Know cuts through the noise of nonstop news to bring you the most compelling stories of the week and of our times.

9:00 PM

General Series "Consuelo Mack Wealthtrack"

GENERAL SERIES

Consuelo Mack Wealthtrack

CONSEULO MACK WEALTHTRACK provides trustworthy, understandable advice about building and protecting wealth over the long-term.

 

Wyoming PBS Store

Looking for a copy of a local production?

Wyoming PBS offers DVD copies of many of our local series. Please contact us about the program you are interested in and we will provide you with availability and pricing information.



Specific Product Ordering Information

Main Street, Wyoming

To order your copy of Main Street, Wyoming, please send $30 per DVD copy, to Wyoming PBS, 2660 Peck Ave., Riverton, WY 82501, attention Sonja Fairfield, or call 800-495-9788 and place your order with Sonja Fairfield. The listed prices include shipping & handling. Allow four to six weeks for delivery. Make sure you give the series number and the title of the Main Street program when you place your order.

     More than Dolls: Being Otomí in Central Mexico
More than Dolls: Being Otomí in Central Mexico

$ 24.95 (DVD)

The Otomí people of central Mexico are frequently stereotyped by Mexicans and foreigners as drunken men whose wives are forced to sell dolls and other handcrafts in the streets of Mexico's large cities and tourist centers.