Elizabeth in the News

  • Top Chef Family Style Season 1 Release Date and Contestants

    The beloved reality cooking show has been on the air since the beginning of time, basically (or at least since 2006), and it's launched dozens of talented chefs into careers as minor food-world celebrities. The spinoff takes everything we love about Original Recipe "Top Chef" and adds children.

  • Journal Record announces 50 Making a Difference honorees

    The Journal Record has announced its “50 Making a Difference” list of honorees for 2021, a litany of extraordinary women whose accomplishments are a credit to the Sooner State. The program will feature an idea exchange and networking opportunity for honorees and those they mentor.

  • Market District to receive facelift ahead of Route 66 centennial

    "Brighter streets, beautiful trees, native plants, and wider sidewalks," said Elizabeth Frame Ellison, executive director of the Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation. "People won't only sit, eat, shop, and sip local, but they'll also enjoy spending the entire day on our unique stretch of Route 66."

  • Smart Investment: Working to Get More Women in the Room

    After years of meetings with Tulsa business leaders, Elizabeth Frame Ellison was tired of being the only woman in the room. The president and CEO of the Tulsa-based Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation and her friend Erika Lucas began talking about creating a membership network of female executives.

  • Mother Road Market to feature all Black-owned businesses for Black History Month

    In honor of February being Black History Month, Mother Road Market has decided to feature all Black-owned businesses in the Shops at Mother Road Market. A limited run of jackets and artwork by artist Frankie Zombie are available for purchase.

  • Tulsans of the Year: Elizabeth Frame Ellison helped drive revitalization of Route 66

    LTFF initially partnered with Tulsa Community College to launch the Tulsa StartUp series, and over the past decade, the program has created more than 2,300 jobs while generating a $57.7 million economic impact for the city, officials said.