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>> announcer: funding for "fair 2016" is brought to you by friends, the iowa public television foundation. midamerican energy company and



yoga in the park des moines

yoga in the park des moines , its energy advantage program are dedicated to increasing the awareness of energy efficiency in iowa's homes and businesses.


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icn's "broadband matters" campaign showcases the importance of delivering broadband to all corners of iowa. information is available at broadbandmatters.com. the iowa lottery. each year lottery proceeds


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century. we provide property, auto, and life coverage for nearly 500 types of businesses in communities across the country. count on emc. ♪ >> iowa public television presents, fair 20167.


here is your host, bill riley. >> i'm bill riley much here we are, together against again, to experience the best and brightest moments from the iowa state fair. and i have to tell you, i think tonight's program might be one of my favorites so far.


so sit back and relax, because we're going to roll out some eye-popping fair fun! and speaking of eye-popping this is a demonstration you just can't unsee. it's chicken washing and blow drying. these little ones saw big


pumpkins outside of the egg building. whoo-hoo! also the sounds drifting out of pioneer hall include the wonderful music of harmonicas. we will see who won ribbons in the harmonica contest. it's sure to be a memorable show


so let's get started. iowa public television's paul jaeger is always a well groomed young man. we sent him to the chicken washing and blow drying demonstration so give tips to some very pampered poultry. >> being salon ready is


important to self esteem, chickens include. that's better. it helps you feel better about what is going on. this chicken got a washing and it's one of the demonstrations here at the fair. and just like it is for us, they


feel a whole lot better. >> i know you have always dreamed about washing a chicken. come on in. >> now tambria is a queen. she has washed a chicken or two in her life. >> a hundred. >> a hundred this year?


>> right. >> show me what year going to do. what do we have? >> this is going to be our soap. the middle has vinegar and that's to rinse out the soap and then blow it. >> water, vinegar and blew it.


>> so you will have one hand on top so they don't jump out? grab the legs again. >> how do i get your legs? there's one. >> you go from the front of him. >> he didn't like that. >> okay. there you are.


and you will do the same process again. >> so this time i'm not going to -- okay. >> when you get ready for a show you have to wash your bird and you have to get them ready. it's a little more work than people realize but it's a lot of


fun. >> there you go. now you come up. first one. >> and we continue. ed. >> you're actually doing a good way to clean them up and they feel better after you wash them


and they can go up and just have a blast. >> what made you want to do this. >> we were researching the fair, and i didn't know you needed to wash a chicken. so we ran fast we could to get here.


i did not know this was a thing. so this had to be done. >> it's just a great first impression of the iowa state fair for him. >> the pork industry is huge. it's a great way to show our industry off here at the fair. we are going to start with our


first and have a little fun. >> is that everything you thought it would be. >> everything and more. >> everything and more! why did you want to wash a chicken? >> i'm from the city, and on the east coast, never heard this is


a thing so i had to do it. i had to. >> kind of like you're making like. >> watch him smile. it's hike for the first time in their life and amazing. some people are like i have never seen a bird or held one


and it's a blast for them and they light up. >> our friend mike pearson is in the swine bar now to check out hard working 4hers in the swine show. >> we have a full day of judging in the swine bar. we have 5949 horizontal gaze


nystagmus to look at in order to choose the 4h grand champion. >> today's judge is jason lackey of haskel texas. jason breeds his own show horizontal gaze nystagmus no texas and this is his second time judging swine at the iowa we asked him what he is looking


for in a winning pig. >> the original thing is balance and competition and the pigs are market animals so competition like they have to be put together right and have muscle and be lean and be put together and they have to be structurally sound and they have to balance


for everything, just to fit together. >> confirmation is different. balance is a lot different. the way it industry progressed, you know, a lot of the junior programs, the kids have learned a lot more. there are a lot more hands on.


just the way the pigs are built in general are more geared towards them to be showing in the ring as far as the head carriage and balance and the which that they're put together. but you know competitionly, the industry has changed and they will change year by year


depending on what the consumer wants from a meat standpoint and so for example, you know, 15, 20 years ago, things were much -- pigs per fatter and smaller. then weep went through a trend when they were tall and clean and hard and didn't have much belly to them and now we're kind


of in between those two where they have good lean muscle but not too fat, not too raw. >> horizontal gaze nystagmus are judged in group based on their wait. they're all judged in separate classes. >> pork is a $7.5 billion


industry in iowa. and the trends you see in the show ring will migrate to the finishing ross and the meat case at the grocery store. after 10 hours of judging, jason narrowed it down to three finalists. >> this is about incredible said


of animals to me, and we get back out here, and there's three of them that are very good. two of them dang near made my heart stop when they came in the ring earlier today and they just continue to impress as they get out here. i'm going to go out and shake


the hand of the champion and i will say, before i do, one of the best ones that i have had the thrill of judging as a champion. and thank you again. [ applause ] >> well his name is clay -- her. and he is pretty good if he won.


i named him after clay massey for the tax credit so. >> we have a special diet. like milk and other stuff in there, and he has his own die get there and other chicks don't have it. >> so that will do it from the swine bar congratulations to all


of the winners. >> the iowa state fair blazes new trails every year. but 70 years ago it gave visitors at what was then a new technology. it was television. >> before any stations were on the air in the state of iowa,


the 1946 iowa state fair gave visitors a preview of television. >> ray dennis worked in radio for several years. then co-founded des moines broadcasting.com. it's a web site devoted to the history of radio and television


in central iowa. people probably had heard about there was a slow start of television right before worked war ii but it didn't really catch on. we were not able to do anything until after the war. it was coming.


i didn't come to iowa until at least central iowa area until 1949. and they got a chance to have a preview of what it might be >> that's how i got the bug to get into television. i got bit by a dap tv bug and i wanted to make that my career


and i did. >> retired staffer bob cannon supplied broadcasting.ccom with these historical photos of what is believed to be iowa's first exposure to television. >> my dad worked for krg radio at the time but his boss called he up one day and asked if i


would like to work a tv camera at the state fair. i said what's tv? so we go to the state fair in 1946, and that was at the international harvester tent and had a huge crowd. >> announcer: the television demonstration was cooperation


between krnt radio, rca, and international harvester. it included closed circuit tv programs using krnt personality personalities, guests and audience participation. it was exciting for people to see what was to come in the world of broadcasting.


>> a lot of people went through it, i think he said 218,000 people went through. and i want to think they would have been pretty impressed with it and saying, well, when will i be able to have this, when will i be able to have a television. >> because it's new.


it was so new. people didn't even know what television was. so they had -- that's what the demonstration was all about. >> bob witnessed many changes in television during his 35 year broadcasting career. he rehearse its infancy,


describing what things were like at the 1946 demonstration at the iowa state fair. >> i had great experience with the cameras out at the state fair in '46. they had no view finders. we took all of our information to the intercom.


we just pointed the cameras where they told us to point it. the cam cameras were mounted on a plywood platform on wheels. and the cameras couldn't move around unless somebody pushed the platform on wheels around. so the cameraman and the camera were all on this platform, and


we had boy scouts if we wanted to zoom in to an object or something, we would just give them a little hand signal 0 move in, and then stop, roll back out, and stop. and the boy scouts was our mobility on stage. >> it's fair time!


iowa public television has broadcast the iowa state fair for 46 years. today it's a huge production. bringing the fair to hundreds of thousand dollars of viewers. people in the late 1940's had little knowledge of television and couldn't have imagined then


what it would become. >> i have a little bit of historian in me. i don't know. maybe most people have a little bit of that, or a desire to know about the past and maybe naturally curious about, well, where did television come from


here in central iowa. >> bob is proud so-to-have been part of the 1946 television demonstration at the iowa state fair knowing he was on the cusp of something extraordinary and great. great. >> it's kind of hard to


describe. it's just a feeling that you get. like you might have won that gold pot at the end of the rainbow. >> iowa public television's travis graven can grow a pretty impressive beard.


so he was interested to see what it took to be a part of the beard growing contest. i am a beard growing rocky so i figure i'm probably not seasoned enough 0 enter a state fair competition in any first year but i am going to head inside and see if these experts can


give me a few tips. >> announcer: you have been at this a few years. this didn't come in overnight. >> it could have but it's about four years in the making. do you have any tips foster me if i wanted to do what i have going on here.


>> just let it grow. >> i mean, there's not a lot to it. >> it looks like the little guy is having fun with it. >> do you have any tips for me, if i wanted to grow mine out like this, how do i make it happen?


>> i'm not high on maintenance. you just kind to let it go, see what happens. >> oh, we get blue ribbons and it doesn't matter as long as we compete. we put some time into it. >> none of a lot of these guys are proud of their period.


>> i'm seeing a little sparkle in here. what is the secret? >> shimmer. they call it shimmer. you have a little maintenance >> you have to. you can't just let it grow. it will be wild.


>> i just started growing this earlier this year. what would you recommend that i >> just keep letting it grow, trim it up. >> do you have look around here and have a little bit of beard envy. >> not so much.


my mustache keeps everybody down >> i maintain every couple of days. i trim it up? well i don't know, there's not much you can do. >> keep a longer clipper guard. >> i need to let it grow out, is that what you're saying.


>> it's a 5:00 shadow, let it go. >> i saw a picture of my old man back in the day and thought i would give it a shot as well. >> just walking in and i got stopped several times for pictures, the kids are calling me over.


it's a lot of fun. >> now i have a little bit of gray in i beard already. do you think i'm on my way to becoming a decent one of these. >> that is coming in. you will neat a he cheater pack like i have. >> the 2016 beard, that is


longest. groomed. most unique. most historic in nature. and test beard designed with costume. >> so it seems like i don't quite measure up so i'm going to put away the clippers.


i have 12 months to next year's state fair. i'm going to get going and get growing. >> creating a miniature farm display takes patience, creativity, and major attention to detail. but the results, they're


captivating. >> i'm seth and this is my model farm it is may and grain elevator on the other side. >> i have about five hundred hours in this display. it started out, this is the building and one thing led to another and i ended up with an


entire display here. these are building that i just designed ask build on my own. they're not based on any particular building. something i just started out doing just for fun and really took off from there. >> the barn was the very first


part i built. i did that about 14 years ago. it's made of the cedar board that i ripped out of the table saw and it's built the with a same way a building would have been built and same with the rebar. i wanted to make it as real as


possible and i wanted to make it something that you would look at for an hour and still not see everything. that was my goal. ever since i was little i always had toy tractors that i played with and i had the miniature farms and built my own buildings


out of cardboard. as i got older we went to the toy truck store show and i went to the model displays up there and eventually i decided i could do something like that. one thing led to another and here we are. >> i'm at the model that is


still standing in iowa that is no longer used and based off of the real building. i don't know exactly how i decided to build that as a model but to start out, i took about 200 pictures of the actually building and page bank of drawing measurements.


i wanted it to be as accurate and detailed as i could. >> one of my favorite details on the elevator would be the basement. i got all of the electrical equipment down there and there's great britain milling equipment. i just really like the with a i


that part turned out. doe get a lot of questions. everybody wants to know how i make all of the metal pieces. my full name job i'm a mechanic, do small engine row pair. that's obvious from looking inside of the shop building. i have several tractors torn


down like the real thing, and the job i do in real life. that kind of carries over into my work here and mainly it's a lot of evenings and weekends that go into these projects. the elevator was about two years of evenings and weekends pretty much.


>> i just thought this might be a place -- a major agriculture state. a lot of people appreciate it and so i just thought this would be a good place to show it. >> i have lots of ideas, my biggest problem is we have our basement and we ran out of space


to put anything else. >> reporter. >> what happens when you pair big pumpkins with little kids? dan wardel finds out. >> these are big old pumpkins. is for. >> halloween might not be for a few more months but i found big


old pumpkins. >> so elissa and taylor, tell us what is happening behind us right now. >> they're weighing pumpkins. >> how much do you think they weigh. >> a thousand pounds. >> tell us what you need to


think about when you're weighing those pumpkins. >> that there's no hole on the bottom and it doesn't split. >> what would happen if the pumpkin slipped. >> it would hit the ground and split. >> are you worried about your


feet. >> well they shouldn't be in the way. >> ashley, is this your pumpkin? >> yeah. >> this baby is big. how many pounds is it going to >> probably 890. >> you have to tell me ashley,


how on earth do you grow a pumpkin this big. >> for fertilizer you have to use -- and water it every take and make sure it has sunlight and stuff like that i guess. >> now elijah do you think you and i put f. we both put our husbands into it we could lift


one these pumpkins? >> maybe. >> let's see those muscles. >> you cut that open. what's inside of it? >> seeds. seeds and all of the other goodies. the remind is really thick.


>> they have to be about that big, aren't they? >> yes, they are. >> hanna if you had a pumpkin that size, what would you could have been into it. >> i think i would carve a scary face and scare my sister. >> what are you going to carve


into this pumpkin. >> sometimes we carve the pumpkin like it has hair or something. >> all right, dad, you just had a purpose kin weighed. how much. >> 3 the 6. >> 396?


that's lot of pumpkin? it is. >> when you planted it, did you ever have a feeling it would grow this big? >> i had a feeling it would. >> you had confidence from day one, right, ashley? >> yes.


>> there's always a lot to see at the iowa stated fair. but there's also time to stop and honor our country's heros in the veteran's parade. >> ♪ ♪ star spangled banner yet wave ♪ ♪ o'er the land of the free ♪


♪ and the home of the brave ♪ >> now, the governor of the state of iowa hereby proclaim this week, august 15 through 21, 2016 as navy week in iowa. >> navy week goes all around the country, a few cities each year and we go around to tell our story in places that may not


otherwise have an understanding what the navy does for it. >> it just fell this week it was navy week and they asked if they could come and be participant of this and yes, they can, and it's not just the iowa guard and the iowa base refreshes. it's all of the military.


>> next is the veterans of 3227 from -- veterans of world war ii, desert storm, iraq and afghanistan veterans and wives and auxillary members. here is one for you. this is their 45th year participating in the iowa state fair veterans day parade.


so they have been around a long time and we thank them for being here with us. >> american legion or posts across iowa, being led down the street by their national and their state commander, what deal. >> let's give them all a big


round of. they all serve deserve recognition. >> and the next entry is very here and dear to all of us particular -- from the iowa home base, operation. the tractor-trailer promoting highly successful home based


iowa program was 32 years ago to veterans and service members leading to come back to iowa. it's working. they filled over 2300 jobs since the bill enact on multimedia day of 14. next sent ready to comes in, marine core league, good


morning. ritual is the commander of that organization. we're glad they came with us this morning. thank you gentlemen. >> our effort is towards recognizing veterans. if they haven't been thanked


before, we're going to thank them for their service f they have been thanked 101 times they will be thanked 102. >> the number that we see at the supported -- >> there are so many opportunities for folks to compete in a variety of contests


here at the state fair. here is just a sampling of some of them. >> can you believe it? we're almost halfway through the show tonight. don't worry. we have a phenomenal second half coming your way.


including listening in on harmonica contest. getting our fitness started with yoga at the fair. and another peak behind the scenes as our you captured the fair happenings for our highlight show coverage. so stick around. we will be back with more good


times from the iowa state fair, only an iowa public television >> at iowa public television we love to discover the fair for you. that's only possible because of support from the viewers like right now we're hoping you can kneel a connection to iowa


public television for bringing you and your families these exciting stories. call now to pledge your financial support. and when you donate at the $60 level we will send you this windshield sun shade as our way of saying thank you.


show your love for the world famous iowa state fair by showing your financial support to iowa public television and stay tuned for more remarkable stories. >> on the next iowa ingredient join me for an iowa state food frenzy.


we will learn to prepare delicious fair-inspired dishes in our own kitchens any time the fair food urge hits ask look at the history and popularity of the iowa state fair cookbook and its blue ribbon recipes. all that and more on an ingredient iowa state fair


special. >> friday at 8:30 on iowa public television. >> we saw so many acts a the talent competition today. here are the acts that advanced. >> hey it's shaping up to be a fantastic talent championship tune in sunday at 8:00 p.m. here


on iowa public television as we showcase some of iowa's most talented young performers. >> welcome to the iowa state fair highlight show. we're sure having fun. hope you are as well. iowa public television's charity has spent this time talking to


veteran fair folks and now she is talking to someone that makes it run as smooth as silk. let's check in with charity. >> this is an institution at the iowa state fair and the manager, john porter has been here from the very start. >> this is a real destination


for people at the stair. what do you think brings people in. >> well, i think our ability to serve and pass is one thing and the quality that we put out and i think between those two, they all like to come here, and we treat them well.


>> what is your most popular dish. >> for meme who haven't had it, mashed potatoes and peas. starts with mash poets in the bottom, roast beef and gravy on top and we top it off with shredded cheese and cherry tomato on top.


>> what is your favorite? >> i like a stake sandwich. we have prime rib. anybody that likes prime rib come here because we to it in such mass quantities it's never over done. we have a somebody that knows how to do it and it's excellent.


if you can cut prime rib with a plastic knife you have tender meat. >> you have we're farmers that come in and that are part of operation. absolutely. there's 1350 of them coming in during the course of the fair.


it takes a lot of people to make it run. takes about 110 to 125 people a take to keep it going and constantly answering the same we, where is this and where is that. >> so 32 years, when are you coming back?


>> well, i got -- i invested a lot of myself time and effort into this and i just want to keep it going, you know. one more year. just one more year. >> every year is one more year. >> we started in a tent in 1985, a little 40 by 60 tent and what


it has grown into now just makes you step back and think this has worked pretty good. >> john, thank you very much. >> ok. >> thank you. >> some say it's the friendly and the fact most convenient of the musical instruments, the


harmonica. it can be taken anywhere and sounds awesome on the pioneer stage. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (playing amazing grace). >> my mom said, would you rather have something you can get hurt


on or something you can use to make music. and i said i play the trumpet so i might as well play harmonica. it's just a hobby for me. i haven't even had a single lesson. if anyone plays the harmonica and they're young, they should


come out. it's a fun competition. (playing: proud to be an american) ♪. >> all over-the place. 2010, 2009. depends on the judges. >> the art of storytelling is


being showcased at the iowa state fair this year. let's cozy up and-to the des moines story teller's project. >> this is the it is my name is story tellers project. >> when i describe the symptoms to the vet and he had a chance


to look cedric over, he diagnosed cedric with obsessive compulsive disorder or ocd. >> it's a project from the des moines register. we coach every day people to tell real, true first person stories so the audience can hear it as it was intended.


>> i was walking real tall when all of a sudden my horse lays down. he rolled on his back. i don't know why he would do it was -- i was saying get up horse, get up. he wouldn't get up. >> there's something about a


story that builds empathy that people really connect to. it's raw and intimate storytelling. >> that's a joy that comes from having your own pack is absolutely worth it. thanks. >> i think we also believe


there's power in connection. >> i do remember three things they said. the first one was he does not belong in my class. the second one was he is not ready to be in the school and the third one was, why the heck are you doing to me.


what the heck are you doing to me that you're putting this kid in my class. >> we wanted to come to an audience. >> and they said -- i didn't speak english and they asked the spanish teach tore come in and translate for me.


but she didn't speak spanish but that's nor a different day. >> it's really fantastic -- my favorite part is being able to see -- i have never done anything like this before. it's a little bit of everybody. >> even though there wasn't a girl my age within a three mile


radius, i had plenty of friends. i had my big . >> it's an intense process, we're asking people to be vulnerable ask give a little bit of themselves to the audience. >> but the expression i remember on my dad's face is he lowered the gun and shot and that he


heard me, this shy, invisible child, invisible no more was a force to be reckoned with because i had a that moment had lost my fear but found my voice. and it's something that -- even to this day. thank you. >> if you're like me, you


probably have indulged in a few too many calories out here at the state fair. it's okay. head up to expo hill for some fitness at the fair and some yoga. >> this fair is a place where people come to play and enjoy


lost of different types of experiences, maybe even try something new. i have done yoga before but i'm a beginner. i'm curious to know more and today i'm going to give it a try. >> class is about to get


started. we're going to have lots of types of people here today. what should they wear? >> anything they're comfortable yoga pants are not required. what if i have my family here today. >> you can bring your family.


>> the little ones? >> everybody is welcome. you can bring anything you want and that's going to be great. >> but yoga is just a great way to start your stress, to increase your heart rate for your cardiovascular. you can really focus on balance


and flexibility. >> we are a nonprofit organization and working to make iowa the healthiest state in the nation. we partner with the iowa state fair to offer a healthy option to jump-start people's day by offering the -- you can try


everything from zumba to insanity to kickboxing and it gives people an opportunity to get a taste of what some of these fun things are. >> iowa ymca loves being involved with the fitness on the hill. the best thing was the that we


get to bring in instructors from all over the state foreclosures marshal found and say cedar rap adds and lamar and everywhere. ymca's love offering yoga class is good for everything e. for everyone expert to beginner? yoga has many modifications. love times we think we have to


have a lot of mall and flexibility even to start. if you don't that's the perfect place to start. you will gain those with consistency. even if you're starting in the chair and doing seated yoga. if you're very athletic you can


compliment your -- being able to stretch out and gain flexibility, repair and recover better. if you want to you can pick it up all the way. >> this time we will place our heel on our calf. >> being involved in a health or


fitness class at the state fair makes perfect sense to me. at the y, we think you should be able to be healthy wherever you are, whenever you want to. >> it only gives you a chance to go inside yourself internally. you can hear those areas of tension and feel them.


you can come to the present. you're not worried about what happened before or anxiety about the future. to be here and right now and that is why i love yoga. >> i'm a grandstand usher and we live here on-site. i feel awesome and i'm glad they


had something for us. i have been participating on this every single day. >> i have never gone yoga before but i notice that i feel more walk now because i kind of row racked and let it all go, and it really helped me. >> starting your day with


fitness on the hill helps you wake up and be ready for your day and relax and stretch out and it's really fun. >> namaste. >> heirloom totes are sometimes grown for historical interest, for taste, for beauty tore to win an award at the iowa state


fair. >> we're in the heart of tomato growing season and farmers have brought their bounty. there are varieties like red zebra and peach that celebrate the history and he diversity see of heirloom totes tomatoes. >> heirloom totes are a little


tricky because they're not always uniform and that's one of the things that we look for in any kind of tomato, with uniformity and we have three on a plate so we want those three to be identical to one another and that's with the heirloom. >> type, uniformity, it should


be without any blemishes and that sort of thing. >> then we want that perfect tomato, the tomato that you want to bite into it in fact it should hurt because we can't take them. these are varieties passed down generation to generation.


so you can actually grow these and they come back. and so these can go back, 18 hundreds whatever. some of them have interesting starts where they came from, maybe europe at some point or maybe a family. some from identify with a in the


midwest. >> this one is nice and -- it's not west. it's an iowa heirloom. that one is good. this was pretty good. except for, it does some cracking or starting from cracking.


>> it's very uniform. >> i love the coloring. >> this is an unusually one. >> but again very uniform. >> very uniform. >> and it's a tomato that is often kind of hollow on the inside. sometimes a stuffing like a


pepper, hence the name green pepper. >> my favorites are still the red. >> they're pretty food. i like these. >> i like the peach. that's pretty uniform. >> it's a red tote with origin


stripe on it. >> it's a very good flavor and it has a sharp tomato taste. >> there's no real blemishes or bruises on it at all and they are all almost identical size. >> well you have to grow a lot of plants to get three that are good.


and this year they seem to be better than other years. the plants were just -- >> they are more interesting than typical tomato. they're more colorful. you get multiple colors. they have a story mind them and they have been cut for a reason


because they have mutually really good taste. >> anybody can imitate a dog parking or a cat meowing but crowing like a rooster that has reached a more sophisticated status and has its own state contest. (rooster crowing ).


>> (crowing). >> (crowing) >> do it again. >> first place for 2016 goes for 243. >> well, i won it five times before this, so i was really excited. and my brothers were both doings


this year so i thought i would to it with them to show them how. >> we like to give viewer's 360-degree view at fair time. this year we're showing you a sneak peek behind the scenes at our production crews as they create these nightly broadcasts.


we certainly love our job. ♪ well, that brings us to the close of tonight's state fair coverage. what an unforgettable night. joins tomorrow as we dig up more fair fun. if you would hike to relive state fair moments before then,


hurricane watch online and go to our web site. they will find fair videos, and links to our social media conversations. or even on snapchat. you can go to iptv.oorg to experience the fair time magic any day of the year.


for tomorrow night we wish we could bring it to you in 3d. it's going to be action packed. the sheep-shearing will be in the line up. it's always a blast to watch. and ladies rubber chicken throwing? we will have you giggling and


thanks for celebrating our beloved iowa state fair with us. i'm looking forward to bring nothing highlights next time. i'm bob riley reminding you have fun at the fair! b . >> since 1911, emc insurance has


partnered with local independent insurance agencies to provide protection to our customers. hearded in des moines iowa, policyholders have 20 locations across the country. found on emc. >> the iowa state fair and filled with iowa traditions and


memories established over generations. and at iowa public television we're proud to have been able to capture that legacy for nearly half a century, from the animals in agriculture in the shows and entertainment and the iconic bare suits there's truly


something for everyone at iowa public television. we work hard to capture that variety and bring the spirit of the fair directly to your living room. >> that makes our highlight show the most watched local programming.


now is the time to let us know what iowa public television's coverage of the iowa state fair means to you. give us a call at 800-779-7,000 or visit iptv.org. if you donate at the $60 level we will send you this handy wind shade as a way of saying thank


you for calling iowa public call now and we will see you at the fair. >> iowa public television has brought you nightly coverage of the great iowa state fair for 46 years. competitions, entertainment, livestock, food and fun.


the iowa stated fair is a tradition for so many families across iowa and so is watching all of the pageantry on statewide iowa public >> i'm nick burnett and i like watching iowa public television and the is it fair coverage. i like to watch the clips of


that each night. my mother has been watching it, probably as many years as it has been on. she gets us watching as family. did you see this on iptv last night. we watch a lot of that together. it's fun because you can just


see things that you saw while you were there or if you haven't been to the fair yet you see things that you want to see when you get there. it's been very helpful for us. >> join us nightly at 9 and 10:30 p.m. >> and tell us why you love


watching the fair on iowa public >> hi, i'm bob riley. entertaining traditions at the iowa state fair is the talent championship. iowa television will be there to coffer the talent of young iowans from across the state. tune in sunday at 8:00 p.m. for


the bob riley championship only on iowa public television. >> i never stopped to think about how you see women or don't see women in agriculture. i know what i'm going to do. and then just laying there and thinking about it, and it finally hit me.


it's so simple but it describes




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