Todd Sampson is a Canadian-born Australian award-winning documentary-maker and television presenter.[2] Prior to his public career, Sampson worked as an advertising executive and he currently sits on the Qantas board. He is best known for being a regular panellist on marketing discussion program Gruen, and has also been a guest host on The Project. His choice of t-shirts always spark a trove of controversial discussions post appearance.[3][4] Sampson has also created and presented several science documentary series.
Sampson started in advertising at the Cape Town agency The White House. In the mid-1990s, he worked as a strategist at Australian company The Campaign Palace.[5] He joined Leo Burnett Sydney in 2002[7] and was later appointed CEO of Leo Burnett Australia. In August 2015, Sampson stepped back to the role of non-executive chairman. In December 2016, he resigned as chair of Leo Burnett and is no longer a part of the advertising industry.[8]
He is the co-creator of the Earth Hour initiative, one of the largest environmental movements in history, reaching more than 1.4 billion people in more than 5,500 cities.[9]
In 2014, Sampson was appointed to the board of directors of Fairfax Media, a 2.5-billion-dollar multi-platform media company in Australasia.[9]
Effective February 2015, Sampson joined the Qantas board of directors as a non-executive director.[10][11] His 9-year tenure on the board has recently been called into question with sentiments on Qantas being at an all-time low.[12][13][14]
In October 2013, he was the subject of a science documentary series, Redesign My Brain. The documentary won the 2014 AACTA Award for Best Documentary Television Program.
Sampson has also written and hosted an adventure science series for Discovery International and Network 10 called Todd Sampson's Body Hack. Body Hack was nominated for two Logie Awards – Best Factual Series and Most Outstanding Documentary Series.[citation needed] Sampson also acted a small part as Provost in the Oscar-nominated feature film Lion. In early 2017, Sampson hosted an ABC Science documentary called Life on the Line.[citation needed]
In 2021, the two-part documentary series Mirror, Mirror, created and written by Sampson, screened on Network Ten. The documentary explored the crisis of body image dissatisfaction in society and the manipulative trillion-dollar industry that profits from it.[15] A second season explores how the internet is changing society and what people can do about it.[16]
Personal life
Sampson has lived in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs since arriving in Australia and renovated a house in Vacluse in 2020.[17] He is married to Neomie Sampson, who he first met at a work function in the 1990s, before a chance encounter in the early 2000s.[18] The couple has two daughters, Coco and Jet.[19] Sampson is an adventurer, having completed an unguided ascent to the top of Mount Everest.[20]
Awards
The Australian Financial Review and News Limited ranked him as one of the most influential executives in Australia. He has won a CEO of the Year Award twice and has featured on the cover of BRW magazine. He was ranked as one of the most influential men under 45 by Men's Style and was nominated for GQ's Man of the Year Award.[citation needed]
An art piece by Michelle St Anne called I Love Todd Sampson – Voices of the Vulnerable was performed at Walsh Bay in February and March 2013.[21]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Todd Sampson.