TIPA Executive Director Julie Reed welcomes honorees, advisers and students to the 2026 TIPA Hall of Fame luncheon. Banquet, presented by The University of North Texas Mayborn School of Journalism.
Dr. James Mueller, dean of The University of North Texas Mayborn School of Journalism, talks about the impact of good journalism. UNT was this year's diamond sponsor.
Doug Pils, director of student media at Baylor University, announces the 2026 Hall of Fame inductees: Judy Walgren and Bettye Craddock.
Doug Pils presents Judy Walgren’s Hall of Fame plaque to her mother, Kay Walgren, and sister-in-law, Carolyn Ann Walgren, as they accept on her behalf.
Judy Walgren’s mother, Kay Walgren, shares a few words about Walgren’s accomplishments. Walgren is a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and educator.
Kay Walgren and Carolyn Ann Walgren pose with the Hall of Fame award.
Dave Wilson, a former student of Bettye Craddock, introduces her. He shares the impact she has on her students.
Bettye Craddock prepares to accept her 2026 TIPA Hall of Fame award. Craddock worked for Kilgore College.
Bettye Craddock receives the Hall of Fame award from former student Dave Wilson and Doug Pils, chair of the TIPA Hall of Fame committee.
Bettye Craddock shares her experience in the journalism field and teaching.
Bettye Craddock and former student Kasi Key, TIPA President, reconnect at the 2026 TIPA Hall of Fame Banquet.
Bettye Craddock with her former students and family.
Randy Loftis, senior lecturer at University of North Texas, introduces keynote speaker Olive Talley at the Hall of Fame Banquet. Talley is an award-winning producer, journalist and manager of creative teams.
Olive Talley, TIPA’s 2026 keynote speaker, talks about her journalism career and the impact of good journalism.
Category Archives: Keynote
Award-winning journalist brings versatile career to TIPA 2026
Olive Talley, an award-winning producer, journalist and manager of creative teams, will headline the 2026 TIPA Hall of Fame banquet on March 20. Her 50-year journalism career has spanned all platforms: TV, newspapers, wire services, radio and the web, network television and independent filmmaking. In that time, she has earned a reputation for toughness, fairness and compassion in her work. 
While she’s interviewed and worked with high profile people and well-known companies, Talley believes character and integrity matter the most in telling a story, whether the focus is a billion-dollar firm or a farmer struggling to make ends meet in rural America.
She reported for The Dallas Morning News, The Houston Post, The Houston Chronicle, United Press International and radio stations in Houston, San Antonio and Austin. For more than a decade, she held staff producer positions at both ABC and NBC in New York City. At Dateline NBC, she worked closely with Stone Phillips, Hoda Kotb, Rob Stafford and other correspondents while at ABC’s Prime Time Live!, she produced stories for Diane Sawyer and Sam Donaldson.
After Talley left the news business full time, the nonprofit Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Development at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth hired her as executive producer to conceptualize and create over 60 hours of video content and branded materials to train others about its trust-based intervention for at-risk youth. The Healing Families Series of videos she produced, funded largely by the Rees-Jones Foundation of Dallas, generate revenue for the nonprofit and form the backbone for outreach programs that teach families and professionals about the impact of trauma on child development.
Talley also has held executive positions in a production company that created certified training videos for police, fire and healthcare professionals throughout the US, and an online video channel, where she teamed up with legendary North Texas newsman Tracy Rowlett, to create an online platform designed to educate the public about the natural gas industry.