Mr. Sparks was an editorial assistant; Ms. Walker-Hartshorn was the assistant to the editor in chief.
“What’s interesting is, we were at this lower level, but then we were often asked to help do a gut-check of things like newsletters communicating how Bon Appétit was responding to the criticism over race,” Mr. Sparks said. “I was being put into the role of a cultural consultant.”
Mr. Sparks said he had accepted an offer to be an editor at Eater, a Vox Media food site.
“Jesse and Ryan were valued members of the team and we worked with them to address their concerns about former leadership at the brand,” a Condé Nast spokeswoman said in a statement. “We very much wanted them to be part of the new team under a new editor in chief and offered them enhanced terms to stay through the transition. We respect their decision and wish them the very best.”
The company separately issued an internal note on Friday on the results of a pay equity study that examined the Bon Appétit video team. The note, which Condé Nast shared with The New York Times, concluded that race had played no part in how team members were compensated.
The three journalists who stopped working on the magazine’s videos had worked in the Bon Appétit test kitchen, helping to create online content that can rack up millions of views. Two of them said they had been paid unfairly for their work.