Brittany Walker

Video Support Specialist
Tarrant County College
Fort Worth, TX 76102

Brittany Walker is a Video Support Specialist and audio-visual professional based in Fort Worth, Texas, with a passion for creating high-quality, meaningful content. She began her journey in audio and video production after discovering her interest in film during college, which led her to earn an Associate of Applied Science in Radio and Television Broadcasting from Tarrant County College and a Bachelor of Science in Audio Production from Full Sail University. She is currently pursuing an additional Associate degree in Game Production, combining her creative expertise with her vision to develop therapeutic and healing-focused interactive media.

At Tarrant County College, Brittany manages video production for events, edits content from conception to final product, and ensures technical quality for live streams and media projects. Alongside her full-time role, she freelances as an audiobook editor, applying her skills in audio editing and production to client projects while navigating her personal schedule with ADHD. Her work demonstrates a dedication to organization, technical precision, and creative problem-solving, all rooted in her philosophy of authenticity and integrity.

Brittany is driven by a mission to create content that impacts communities positively. Her long-term goal is to develop video games designed to support mental and emotional healing, leveraging the power of sound and interactive experiences. She attributes her success to mentors, supportive friends, and the courage to remain authentically herself in a challenging and often male-dominated industry. Committed to collaboration, ethical practice, and resilience, Brittany continues to innovate in audio, video, and interactive media, shaping her career around creativity with purpose.

• LinkedIn Video Interview Production Techniques Certification
• LinkedIn Your First After Effects Project Certification

• Tarrant County College – Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.), Radio and Television Broadcasting
• Full Sail University – Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Audio Production
• Tarrant County College – Associate Degree (in progress), Game Production

• Influential Woman 2026

• Phi theta kappa

• Love for kids

Q

What do you attribute your success to?

I attribute my success to the unwavering support of friends, mentors, and my personal network. Their encouragement and belief in me have been instrumental in helping me persevere, speak up for myself, and navigate challenges in my career.

Q

What’s the best career advice you’ve ever received?

The best advice I've ever received came from multiple mentors at different points in my career, and it was the same message: whatever you do, don't change who you are. When I first started my radio television degree, I had a teacher who was a radio personality from Dallas and Atlanta, and she told me, 'Whatever you do, don't change who you are. Be authentically you.' That was very profound for me because I was honestly in that mindset where I needed to make myself different and think different and be different, because I thought that was the only way I could survive, if I could blend into them. But she said don't do that, be you, and she told me she saw me going very far if I did that. Then my new boss at the school told me the same thing: whatever happens, ethically, morally, whatever, with the school laws and stuff, don't let any of this change who you are. I keep getting that same advice, so I think that's the big one that I'm going to continue to use and give out also.

Q

What advice would you give to young women entering your industry?

It is a really hard place to get into, a hard place to get a foot in. I feel like a lot of my struggles were that people didn't want to listen to me just based on the fact that I'm a small, petite person. But I'm not quiet, and that's what made me heard. I made sure I was heard. I still do that at work now. If there's something I don't think is right, I definitely say it. It might get me in trouble, but I don't care, as long as I know that I've put my word out there and I can add my two cents to where I feel like it needs to be, ethically, whatever. Not being afraid is a big thing that a lot of people struggle with. They get scared and think 'if I say that I'm going to fail.' But that actually pulls you up a little bit higher, because you're not afraid to take that step. You're not afraid to stand up for yourself. The ones that are afraid don't make it.

Q

What are the biggest challenges or opportunities in your field right now?

Challenges include a male-dominated industry, barriers to entry, restrictive higher-education regulations, and managing personal health and neurodivergence while working. Opportunities lie in creating innovative media, such as therapeutic video games that combine audio and interactive gameplay to promote healing and wellness.

Q

What values are most important to you in your work and personal life?

Authenticity, integrity, community support, resilience, and the courage to speak up for what is right.

Locations

Tarrant County College

1500 Houston St, Fort Worth, TX 76102