Allie Spillyards joined NBC 5 in October 2017. She’s a general assignment reporter who often works out of Dallas or Collin county. You can usually catch her stories on NBC 5 at 10 p.m.
Allie is a North Texas native who was born and raised in Wylie.
She’s made several stops in the southeast, working most recently at WIS in Columbia, SC where she anchored weekend mornings and covered general news. While in Columbia, she reported on the tragic shooting at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston and followed the controversy over removing the Confederate flag from the South Carolina State House grounds. She also covered the historic flooding in October 2015 that destroyed hundreds of homes and left 17 people dead.
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Prior to South Carolina, Allie worked as a reporter at WCNC in Charlotte, NC.
She started her career at WVLT in Knoxville, TN as a general assignment reporter. She then helped launch a weekend morning newscast as an anchor before moving to weekday mornings.
In 2017, Allie was awarded a fellowship to train in computer assisted reporting with Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc.
Allie’s a proud graduate of the University of Missouri where she learned her way around a newsroom at KOMU both on and off air. She has a bachelor’s in journalism and a minor in political science. While there, Allie spent a semester in Brussels, Belgium as an intern at Reuters.
Now that she’s back in North Texas, Allie lives in Dallas with her husband, Blake, and their spoiled rotten rescue pup, Roux. She’s thrilled to be back home, telling stories from familiar communities and reporting news that impacts friends, family and neighbors.
The Latest
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Fort Worth neighborhood frustrated after losing service for second time
There’s a lot of frustration in a Fort Worth neighborhood where people have no internet, phone and TV service. It’s the second time it’s happened recently. First it was copper thieves — now something else. Allie Spillyards picks up the story from there.
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After copper thefts cause internet outage, Fort Worth neighbors lose service again
There’s a lot of frustration in a Fort Worth neighborhood where people have no internet, phone and TV service.
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Man and woman attacked by bees in North Richland Hills neighborhood
For several hours Tuesday afternoon, neighbors in a North Richland Hills neighborhood were asked to stay in their homes after a swarm of bees attacked a couple doing lawn work. Allie Spillyards has more from the woman who called police for help and those called in to manage the scene.
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‘His face had blood all over it': North Texans hospitalized in bee swarm attack
Two people were transported to a local hospital after reports of a bee swarm attack in North Richland Hills Tuesday.
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Standoff ends after reports of gunfire in Fort Worth
Fort Worth police say a standoff ended peacefully Tuesday after a woman reportedly threatened to shoot anyone who tried to enter her home.
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Wall of Service memorial unveiled in Rockwall
Standing alongside Lake Ray Hubbard, at the start of Heroes Memorial Bridge, organizers revealed the the Heroes Memorial Park Monument. NBC 5’s Allie Spillyards talked with families of those honored.
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First of its kind monument honoring first responders who died by suicide unveiled in Rockwall
The Heroes Memorial Park Monument now stands alongside Lake Ray Hubbard to honor first responders and members of the military who’ve died by suicide.
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City approves donation for new Dallas deck park
Dallas’ next deck park is one step closer to reality. This week, the city approved a $23 million gift in exchange for naming rights of what’s become known as the Southern Gateway Park. That 5-acre project spanning I-35 E between Ewing and Marsalis Avenues was designed to bridge Oak Cliff. NBC 5’s Allie Spillyards has more on the donation’s significance...
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Deck park designed to bridge southern Dallas gets big donation, new name
Nearly 70 years after the construction of I-35 ripped through Oak Cliff, a massive undertaking to mend both a physical and economic divide is crossing the finish line.
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Dallas Chief of Police Eddie Garcia will move to Austin to oversee public safety
Dallas Chief of Police Eddie Garcia is leaving for Austin to take on a civilian role. NBC 5’s Allie Spillyards and Larry Collins tell us more.