Move over, “Real Housewives." It’s time for “Redneck Housewives of Alabama.”

This new reality series -- which stars eight truck-driving, gun-toting, beer-swilling, family-raising women from our state -- will screen its pilot episode on Nov. 10 at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville.

The 30-minute program offers a sneak peek at a down-home show created by a Huntsville company, Helen Evans LLC, and directed by Kevin Wayne of Kevin Wayne Films. Wayne, a Birmingham filmmaker, also serves as executive producer of the series, which started recruiting cast members in May 2017 and began filming later that year.

“From mud bogs to overcoming addiction and divorces, these ladies are just the beginning of what life in Sweet Home Alabama is like," the series website says, touting a “new Southern drama filled with Southern charm.”

Admission is free to the pilot screening at the space center, 1 Tranquility Base. It’s part of an event, 5 p.m.-7 p.m., that includes appearances by the cast -- Rhonda Randolph, Leah Seawright, Phyllis Neighbors, Kelly Wilson, Emily Smotherman, Beth Hurt, Amanda Keller and Yolanda Banks -- along with autograph signings and photo sessions.

A trailer for the pilot made its debut in August on YouTube, showing cast members doing everything from working on a farm to mudbogging to getting a tattoo.

“Some people’s gonna like us and some are not,” Wilson says.

“But a redneck housewife, we work so hard," Neighbors says. “We are taking care of our family and our friends. We want to be outside. We want to have fun. We don’t mind sweating and getting dirty, whether it’s shooting a gun or being on a boat or riding a horse or fishing. Fishing is so much fun.”

It’s unclear if the series has hooked a network deal or not, but updates on the show are posted on the official website and Facebook page. Cast members made an appearance on Sept. 29 at the Smith Lake Country Music Festival, for example, and Seawright, a singer-songwriter from Fort Payne, performed there with her band. (In the trailer, Seawright mentions that she once threw her own pee in her face by mistake, but we’ll have to watch the full pilot episode to find out more.)

When “Redneck Housewives” announced its casting call last year, a representative for the show said the ideal candidates would be outgoing, outdoorsy women who are adventurous and colorful. At the time, the show’s website said the creators also were looking for drama, via women who are “battling with serious and realistic issues such as suicide, divorce, broken relationships, bankruptcy, infidelity, family feuding, alcoholism, deadbeat dads and foreclosures.”

Find out more about the cast members here, and watch their audition videos.