Our recent investigation also has not uncovered evidence that race played a factor in setting compensation for any video-team members.” While we found that everyone was compensated fairly for video through their full-time salaries or other means as part of project or freelance agreements, it’s on us that our lack of open communication about video compensation created confusion. In a statement to The Post, a CNE spokesperson said the company studied its video-pay practices and “we fully acknowledge the need to do a better job building understanding and consistency across our video-compensation policies. Krishna, El-Waylly and Martinez had been in five weeks of contract negotiations before their exits, reported Business Insider.īut the added pressure “wasn’t enough,” Lalli Music wrote Wednesday, claiming CNE was “unable or unwilling to articulate specific, measurable goals about diversity and inclusion among BA hosts, crew, show topics or recipe selection.” Test Kitchen contributing writer Priya Krishna, contributing food editor Rick Martinez and El-Waylly - who make up half of the six people of color featured on the videos - announced their departures last week, followed by Molly Baz, the senior food editor, and Gaby Melian, the Test Kitchen manager, who will remain in that role but will not appear in videos.Īll video production ceased as of about two months ago, as many staffers refused to appear in them until their colleagues were paid fairly. “Her statements ushered in a torrent of information about failures at Condé Nast Entertainment.” Bon Appétit Test Kitchen personalities (from left) Chris Morocco, Claire Saffitz, Priya Krishna, Carla Lalli Music, Brad Leone, Gaby Melian, Sohla El-Waylly, Adam Rapoport, Molly Baz, Andy Baraghani and Christina Chaey Getty Images “Sohla El-Waylly bravely spoke out about her salary and the racist practices that sidelined and tokenized her as a Bon Appétit video host,” Lalli Music wrote in her resignation announcement. That was followed by further allegations that Matt Duckor, head of CNE’s lifestyle video programming, didn’t feature people of color in Test Kitchen videos and paid them less, leading to Duckor’s stepping down. Soon after, assistant food editor Sohla El-Waylly publicly addressed her low salary compared to her white colleagues’. The drama began unfolding in June, when Bon Appétit editor-in-chief Adam Rapoport resigned after a photo surfaced that showed him in brownface. The video channel, which boasts 6 million subscribers on YouTube, has been one of the few money-making successes for the beleaguered publishing company, New York Magazine reported last year. They rose to celebrity status demonstrating cooking techniques and recipes in Bon Appétit’s airy One World Trade Center kitchen. I will miss doing something I loved with people I still love,” tweeted Lalli Music, who added that she’ll remain with the company in her editorial role.Ĭondé Nast Entertainment, or CNE, the company’s arm that runs the video division, has lost six of its video personalities. The chef and cookbook author is the latest staffer to bail on the brand, which workers say is continuing to balk at calls for pay equity, among other things, for its employees of color during new contract negotiations. It’s a mass exodus at one of Condé Nast’s most successful endeavors.īon Appétit’s Test Kitchen has lost Carla Lalli Music, the food mag’s editor-at-large and one of the video series’ most popular contributors. This conservative duo is taking on Vogue with their own online magazine Vogue editor out after losing power struggle with Anna Wintour: bombshell reportĬondé Nast's Allure names Dylan Mulvaney to mag's ‘A-List,' sparking calls for boycott TheWrap taps ex-Condé Nast exec Edward Menicheschi for top gig
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