A former Houston TV meteorologist is airing her grievances in a very public way.
Brittany Begley, who was let go from KPRC 2 in Houston, has sharply criticized station leadership and co-workers, sharing numerous screenshots of emails, internal messages and photos that she claims reveal a deeply troubled workplace culture, according to CHRON.
“Destroyed for telling the truth … and now I’ve had enough of the TV industry,” she wrote in a July 2 Instagram post.
In the post, Begley said she believed she was disciplined for speaking out on social media in early June about what she described as unfair treatment. She also alleged that management had already made the decision to terminate her before she sat down with human resources.
“I was found guilty before I even walked into HR,” Begley, 44, who announced her exit on June 24, wrote. “My ‘investigation’ was at 12:30. but the box was at my desk at 9am. Three days suspension just for show.”
Begley shared the remarks alongside an image showing an empty cardboard box.
The former weather anchor, who also said she felt she had not received the professional recognition she deserved, including an Emmy, posted what appeared to be an August 2025 email from station management laying out expectations for the weather department during significant weather events, along with other internal communications.
According to Begley, meteorologists were required to adjust their schedules when major weather systems developed, including reporting early, staying late, and working weekends or previously scheduled days off.
Begley claimed another employee who tried to create change on the weather team was “fired too,” and added, “Having your cake and eating it too — that’s the industry.”
The angry ex-employee complained about employees allegedly arriving late and unprepared while other staff members were expected to pick up their slack.
‘Management says they ‘take all issues seriously,”’ she wrote. ‘If they did, they would’ve fixed the chronic behavior that made two producers quit and left the rest working 6-day weeks.”
Begley also griped the higher-paid meteorologists got to take it easy while lower-rung workers were expected to put in long hours for a lot less take-home pay.
“To be fair, the weather team can be an emotional tornado,” Begley wrote on the post.
‘But when I asked why some meteorologists making $120k–$200k+ were so against picking up shifts or storm standby … while the rest of us worked longer hours, weekends, and shifted days off? At a much lower rate? Crickets.”
But, she insisted in a June 24 Instagram Post that she has had no regrets about speaking her mind.
“I’m not afraid of being disliked for saying what others won’t — especially when living paycheck to paycheck,” adding that she’s “truly grateful for everyone who has invested in me.”
She added: “I hope one day to have a bigger role in TV where I can advocate for people like me who started from the ground up.”















