It was Tabitha Bartoe’s third day on the job at WATE when her bosses at the TV station in Knoxville, Tennessee, pulled her away from training − not for an urgent weather event, but for a hair appointment and shopping spree to find new clothes.

The station felt like a good fit for the recent college grad, and the role of weekend morning weather anchor was a promising one.

But after months of being criticized by supervisors for her appearance − namely, her naturally curly hair − Bartoe said she was let go May 9 because her style didn’t align with company policy.

“It doesn’t even sound real,” Bartoe told the Knox News Sentinel, a member of the USA TODAY Network. “The whole thing just sounds like a joke. And I wish it was.”

Women in television have always had to contend with a narrow beauty standard that can be weaponized to eliminate their jobs. Last year, renowned Canadian television journalist Lisa LaFlamme was fired after she stopped dyeing her hair and let her natural gray show.

In 2019, Mississippi news anchor Brittany Noble-Jones was fired after a supervisor complained about her natural hair. Noble-Jones is Black and did not straighten her hair or wear extensions. She said she was told to use a closet to pump milk for breastfeeding after she returned to work following the birth of her child.

Noble-Jones’ former station is owned by Nexstar Media, the same company that owns WATE.

WATE weather anchor ‘had no say’ in hairstyle

The critiques of Bartoe didn’t stop with the first hair appointment, which was hard enough to endure on its own. Months later, she said, the station asked her to see another stylist with the same vague request to soften her curls.

“It wasn’t necessarily a problem in the beginning because I was just assuming that they were just trying to help me and trying to build my professional image,” Bartoe said. “I was willing to take advantage of it, but I think it was right away when they asked me if I was willing to ever get my hair relaxed. Or, ‘If you straighten your hair, the curl will fall out over time; that’s what we’re looking for.’

“That’s just not what I was looking for. … I’d like to have my natural hair.”

On a second hair appointment, this time with a curly hair specialist, former WATE weather anchor Tabitha Bartoe said the TV station told the stylist to make her curls more defined. This request conflicted with the station's early suggestion to soften her curls and, while Bartoe was willing to try a new look, she never felt she got consistent guidance from her bosses.

Bartoe said she was bullied for her curly hair growing up but has since learned to embrace the look.

She doesn’t know whether her supervisor approved of the new looks after her appointments − only that she was asked to smile for a photo to send to the station’s general manager.