A Houston TV meteorologist and traffic reporter is making waves after lamenting on social media that she never won an Emmy because the industry allegedly doesn’t consider traffic reporting worthy of the honor — and unloading on her own colleagues as undisciplined and calling for a larger role in the business.
Brittany Begley of KPRC-TV in Houston posted a lengthy Instagram message last week in which she complained that despite years of hard work, she had never received one of TV journalism’s highest honors.
“Never won an Emmy because the markets I worked in never thought traffic reporting was worthy of one,” Begley wrote.
In the post, first flagged by industry blog FTVLive, Begley said she’s come to terms with what she viewed as a lack of recognition from the industry.
“I told myself that when I die, at least I’ll know I stood for something — even if the industry never technically thought I was worthy,” she wrote.
The veteran broadcaster appeared most frustrated by what she described as declining standards inside television newsrooms.
She accused her own colleagues of normalizing “bad behavior,” saying they’re “consistently late, not even mic’d up ten minutes before a show, then put it on air as a segment.”
“Where I come from, it’s a write-up, at the very least.”
She later sharpened her criticism.
“They’d leave you dead on the side of the road and still ask for a comp day just to sit on standby,” Begley wrote.
“Can’t even mic up on time because a lack of discipline. And that’s how I know I can win.”
The post was accompanied by a photo of Begley sitting beside an open refrigerator that appeared largely empty.
At one point, she compared herself to a “starving lion in a petting zoo” and wrote: “How many more long walks to an empty refrigerator am I supposed to take, knowing I’m better than this?”
Begley later clarified that the refrigerator reference was not meant literally.
“Not that I couldn’t ask my family for money or groceries — that’s not the point,” she wrote.
The meteorologist also suggested she wants greater influence in the TV industry so she can help others who she believes have been overlooked.
“I won’t apologize for wanting a bigger share of this market so I can actually advocate for people like me,” Begley wrote.
“That way I can eventually hire the folks like you and me — qualified, driven, but hearing nothing back.”
“The ones with empty refrigerators who deserve so much better.”
Contacted by The Post, Begley said she didn’t mean to trash her colleagues but was trying to spur discussion about mental health and professionalism.
“No, it’s not about that at all,” she said in a phone interview. “It’s about after the pandemic raising awareness about how to have healthy newsrooms across America.”
“When we don’t have a discipline to mic up 10 minutes ahead of time … the people behind the scenes, they don’t feel valued or seen, or it makes it stressful when it doesn’t have to be,” she added.
Begley also elaborated on her contention that traffic reporters are overlooked when it comes to industry recognition.
“I’m an amazing traffic reporter and it changed my life, but our Emmys, it was never considered a category even though it’s so hard,” she said.
Begley noted that traffic reporters often handle breaking news, fatal crashes and major roadway emergencies while working some of the longest and earliest shifts in local television.
“I have covered 32-car pileups, interstate shutdowns, people dying,” she said. “I’ve seen the worst of the worst and I’ve really stood there for my community.”
She added that many traffic reporters struggle to advance despite their experience and visibility.
“There are women and men that are traffic reporters … they come in early, they stay late, and they want that promotion,” Begley said. “Sometimes they don’t get it because that’s a hard job to fill.”
“I just really wish that they would have a traffic [Emmy] because we deserve it.”
Begley said in an email that she’s “not afraid of being disliked or judged for saying the things others won’t or can’t,” adding that her workplace criticism wasn’t directed at anyone specific.
“KPRC is aware of the post,” Sean McLaughlin, vice president and general manager of the Houston station, told The Post.
“Our Station takes issues raised by employees seriously and is committed to fostering a positive workplace. As this matter involves an individual employee, we have no further comment.”
Begley joined Houston’s KPRC in 2024 as a weekend morning meteorologist after previous stops in San Francisco, Sacramento, Columbus, Dayton and Charlotte.
















