Angry Ex-Interns Sue Condé Nast, One Says Her Job Was Compared To ‘Devil Wears Prada’

businessinsider.com Pamela Engel
June 13, 2013

Two days after a judge ruled in favor of two ex-Fox Searchlight interns who sued over an unpaid gig they say violated the law, two former CondéNast interns have launched their own lawsuit.

Lauren Ballinger was an intern at W Magazine in 2009 and Matthew Leib interned for The New Yorker in 2009 and 2010, The New York Times reports. The New Yorker paid Leib $300 to $500 for each summer he worked at the magazine, and Ballinger said she was paid $12 a day to work in W’s accessories department.

While Leib was working for The New Yorker, he reviewed pieces for submission, proofread and edited articles, and helped out with various aspects of the magazine’s cartoon section, according to court papers. Leib worked three days a week for about eight hours a day, The Times reported.

Ballinger told The Times that an editor at W compared her internship to Anne Hathaway’s job in the movie “The Devil Wears Prada” but said it was worse because there was no makeover at the end. She said W paid her $12 a day to work in the accessories department, and her hours were  from 8 or 9 a.m. each morning until 8 to 10 p.m. each night. Ballinger said she was responsible for packing, organizing, and delivering accessories to editors.

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More lawsuits were expected to come forward after a judge handed down Tuesday’s ruling in the Fox Searchlight case. The judge found that the interns qualified as “employees” and were entitled to minimum wage.  Alex Footman and Eric Glatt, who brought the suit, both worked as unpaid interns on the “Black Swan” set.  

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The ruling in the Fox Searchlight case might have changed the playing field. That judge said the interns’ suit could proceed as a class action, which means Footman and Glatt could  potentially recover money for all Fox Searchlight unpaid interns.