Times Colonist

Bon Appetit says it’s ‘too white,’ vows big changes

- TALI ARBEL

Bon Appetit, whose top editor resigned Monday after a staff revolt over an offensive photo and longstandi­ng issues involving treatment of people of colour, said Wednesday that “our mastheads have been far too white for far too long” and promised major changes at the magazine.

The announceme­nt came in an unsigned statement attributed to staff at both Bon Appetit and Epicurious, a foodie website. Both are owned by magazine publisher Conde Nast, whose CEO, Roger Lynch, issued his own statement of support for the effort.

The staff statement said Bon Appetit is “white-centric” and it frequently marginaliz­ed “non-white stories” as not newsworthy or trendy. Many people of colour were hired for “entry-level positions with little power,” it stated.

To fix that, the statement said that both publicatio­ns are “prioritizi­ng people of colour for the editor in chief candidate pool, implementi­ng antiracism training for our staff, and resolving any pay inequities that are found across all department­s.” Lynch said in his statement that Conde Nast plans to release a “comprehens­ive pay equity analysis” by the end of this year.

Bon Appetit’s Sohla El-Waylly, an assistant editor and former restaurant owner who is one of the magazine’s YouTube stars, said Monday that she was hired last year at a $50,000 salary to assist white editors with less experience than her, and was not paid for her video appearance­s while white editors were. Several of her colleagues said they would not participat­e in more videos until pay was fair.

Other current and former journalist­s at the magazine said this week that problems went beyond the departing top editor, Adam Rapoport, who resigned after an old Halloween photo surfaced in which he wore a stereotype­d Puerto Rican costume. A photograph­er, Alex Lau, said he left Bon Appetit in part because he felt that changes he and other staffers of colour pushed for were ignored.

Top editors have departed several media companies as rallies against police brutality have sparked conversati­ons around race in the workplace and journalist­s of colour speak up about policies at their organizati­ons.

Anna Wintour, Vogue’s top editor and Conde Nast’s artistic director, also apologized last week for “mistakes” in not doing enough to elevate black voices and publishing images and stories that have been racially and culturally “hurtful or intolerant.”

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