Network coding is an emerging packet-transmission paradigm that naturally finds many applications in ad-hoc wireless networks. The application of network coding to infrastructure-based wireless networks, in particular WLANs, however has not been much investigated. In this presentation, we identify the potential benefits/drawbacks of network coding as applied to WLANs from the content-distribution point of view. We then conclude this presentation with our preliminary results based on a queueing analysis of a wireless cooperative multicasting scenario in which network coding is applied at the access point. Our key observation is that performing network coding in the presence of random packet arrivals and departures may not be beneficial as compared to weighted fair queueing -- a classical scheduling scheme.