In the latest episode of Tia Mowry's Quick Fix web series, Tia Mowry-Hardrict gets candid about the adversity she faced as a biracial child in Hollywood.

She is best known for starring alongside her twin sister Tamera Mowry-Housley in the beloved 90s sitcom Sister, Sister. The show became available to stream on Netflix in July of this year.

"It was very evident to me when I would walk on sets and see how certain stars or actors would be treated who weren’t of ethnicity — better dressing room, better trailer," Mowry-Hardrict said. "Now I'm like, more aware what that was, which is a budget, but back then I didn't know what a budget was. It was so clear how you would see one show that didn’t have a diverse cast that just had a bigger budget so everything just seemed bigger and better. But when it came to my projects and what I was doing, you actually really visually saw the less-than."

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She even recounted a time she and her sister struggled to get a pay raise once the popular sitcom began to gain popularity.

"I remember once the show became a hit, it's very normal for you to ask for a raise. That’s what happens, right? People get raises," she said. "But it was always so hard for my sister and I to get what we felt like we deserved and our paycheck never equaled our counterparts' that weren't of diversity, and that was frustrating. Very, very frustrating."

She praised the sitcom for advocating for her and her sister’s ability to wear their natural, curly hair on screen. She added that Sister, Sister, and her current Netflix series Family Reunion have been the only two shows that have encouraged her to do this.

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"When I was doing Sister, Sister, I had curly hair, and what was interesting was once my sister and I got older and we wanted to be viewed as 'sexy,' we would straighten our hair," she said.

"I went on to do so many other television shows and I would always wear my hair straight because I was insecure about my curly hair. These insecurities came because I didn’t see these images, meaning women with curly hair and their natural hair, being portrayed as beautiful.”

Mowry-Hardrict shared that she struggled to appear “Black enough” in auditions. "I've been told I'm not Black enough, which was very odd and weird to me," she recalls. " 'You don’t look Black enough. I think you would fit more of the Latino role.' It's like, what? These were casting directors who did not understand the different shades of Black culture."

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Despite the negative experiences she dealt with in her early career, Mowry-Hardrict praises the show for helping her build strong ambitions.

"How I was treated is why I built my work ethic," she said. "Nothing came easy to me. I always had to work harder than. I've always had to be better than average. And I guess if I didn't go through what I had gone through or if I didn’t see what I had seen when I was a child, I don’t think I would be where I am today, which is a hard freaking worker. Because guess what? It's hard to outwork someone."

All six seasons of Sister, Sister is currently available to stream now on Netflix.

NEXT: Sister, Sister: Everything Tia & Tamera Have Been Up To Since The Show