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If the owners of this private establishment want to attract a certain clientele and this woman didn't meet the their criteria of what they demanded in a waitress...
Either go to a gym and lose weight or apply somewhere else for a job....
That growth is one reason Tilted Kilt CEO Rod Lynch, bristles at the "breastaurant" moniker. He says the word implies that the company's success is based purely on sex appeal. To the contrary, he says his customers — about three-quarters of whom are men and of the average age of 36 — consistently say the experience is about far more.
Tilted Kilt doesn't go so far to call itself a family restaurant. But Lynch understands the risks of crossing a certain line.
"We want to be very PG-13," he says. Its "class in all things" motto also means servers can't have tattoos, piercings or dyed hair.
A California woman claims she got turned down for a job at a restaurant because of her weight.
Jennifer Rogers, 20, says she was turned down for a job at The Tilted Kilt in Southern California because the skirt they require female employees to wear was a size too small. Rogers says the rejection was upsetting and is not fair.
"I could not work there because I couldn't wear the uniform. Everyone's perfect the way that they are, and we shouldn't have to look a certain way," said Rogers.
She is wrong. It's a privately owned establishment and she needed to fit the uniform. She did not fit. Too bad.
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