Stephen Lambert (media executive)

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Stephen Lambert
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Born (1959-03-22) 22 March 1959 (age 65)
London, England
Alma mater University of East Anglia (B.A., Politics and Philosophy, 1981)
University of Oxford (M.A., Politics, 1982)
Occupation Television producer
Notable credit(s) Wife Swap
Faking It
The Secret Millionaire
Undercover Boss
Gogglebox
Spouse(s) Jenni Russell
Children 1 daughter, 1 son
Website http://www.studiolambert.com

Stephen Lambert (born 22 March 1959) is an English television producer and executive who works in Britain and America. He is best known for launching international hit formats such as the award-winning Wife Swap, Faking It, The Secret Millionaire, Undercover Boss and Gogglebox.

He is chairman of All3Media America, the Los Angeles-based production studio that produces the US content of the most of the companies in the All3Media group. He is also chief executive of Studio Lambert, one of All3Media's UK production companies.[1]

His programs have won many international awards, including more than half a dozen BAFTA awards, the Rose D'Or of Montreaux and both Primetime and International Emmys.

In 2010, The Huffington Post selected Lambert as one its Game Changers - '100 innovators, mavericks, visionaries, and leaders who are changing the way we look at the world and the way we live in it.' [2] In 2014 Lambert was included in the Media Guardian 100,[3] and in 2016 he was named as one of the 20 most influential people in broadcasting by Debrett's.[4]

He is married to newspaper columnist Jenni Russell and they have two children.

Education

Born in London, Lambert was educated at Thames Valley Grammar School and the University of East Anglia graduating with a first in Politics and Philosophy. He studied as a post-graduate student at Nuffield College, Oxford where he wrote a book on the history of British broadcasting policy published by the British Film Institute called Channel 4: Television With A Difference? that coincided with the launch of Britain's fourth terrestrial channel in November 1982.

BBC

In 1983, he joined the BBC and worked in the Documentaries Department for the next sixteen years. He was a producer and director of documentaries for the BAFTA-winning BBC2 series 40 Minutes and the BBC1 series Inside Story; many set in conflict areas such as Sri Lanka, Croatia, South Africa, Kuwait, Gaza and Northern Ireland. Between 1992 and 1994, he produced and directed a six-part documentary series for BBC2 about the Foreign and Commonwealth Office which was filmed in Northern Iraq, the former Soviet Union, Bosnia, Thailand, Saudi Arabia, Europe, the US and in Whitehall.

In 1994, Lambert became the founding editor of BBC2's main documentary strand of the 1990s, Modern Times. While running Modern Times, he executive produced some of the first BBC1 docu-soaps, including The Clampers and Lakesiders, as well as the fly-on-the-wall series about Sunderland A.F.C., Premier Passions and the five part Royal Television Society award-winning series about the Department of Social Security called The System. Lambert also started a long working relationship with the film-maker Adam Curtis, executive producing his series The Mayfair Set, winner of the 1999 BAFTA best factual series award.

RDF Media

In 1998, Lambert became RDF Media's first director of programs. He devised and executive produced the highly acclaimed Faking It series which premiered on Channel 4 in 2000. It won the BAFTA best features program award in 2001 and 2002 and the Rose d'Or in 2003. This was followed by Wife Swap, which was a hit on Channel 4 attracting audiences of more than six million. It won the BAFTA best features program award in 2003 and the Rose D'Or in 2004. Lambert continued working with Adam Curtis, executive producing his The Century of the Self (2002), The Power of Nightmares (2004) (winner of BAFTA best factual series award 2004), and The Trap (2007).

From 1998 to 2005, RDF Media's grew rapidly with Lambert spearheading its editorial development. RDF started producing in the US and opened its RDF USA production office in Los Angeles. In 2004, Wife Swap became RDF's first US network series airing on ABC.[5] RDF received Broadcast's Best Production Company of the Year Award for 2002, 2004 & 2006, the only company to win this award three times. In May 2005, RDF Media floated on the London Stock Exchange's Alternative Investment Market and started to acquire other independent production companies such as IWC Media, The Foundation, The Comedy Unit, Touchpaper Television.[6] Lambert became the group's chief creative officer. He continued to devise new formats such as The Secret Millionaire, which won the Rose d'Or in 2007, Shipwrecked: Battle of the Islands for Channel 4, and The Verdict for BBC2.

In July 2007, Lambert found himself caught up in controversy when the BBC showed a trailer to journalists of a documentary series that RDF was producing called A Year with the Queen. The trailer seemed to show the Queen walking out of a photo-shoot with celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz, but it later emerged she was walking into the shoot. Lambert took responsibility for a misleadingly edited trailer that was shown previously to international co-producers, but he was not involved in the edit of the BBC trailer shown to the press. When an inquiry into the affair reported in October 2007, Lambert chose to leave RDF and at the same time, Peter Fincham, Controller of BBC One, and his head of publicity, Jane Fletcher, resigned from their jobs.[7]

Studio Lambert

In 2008, Lambert launched a new independent production company, Studio Lambert, in partnership with All3Media.[8] In the 2011 Broadcast (magazine) survey of independent production companies, Studio Lambert ranked #11 by size of turnover.[9]

Lambert's first major formatted show in his new company was Undercover Boss, which started on Britain's Channel 4 in 2009 and has been produced in more than twenty countries. The company's American version premiered on CBS in February 2010 immediately after the Super Bowl to a record-breaking audience of nearly 40 million viewers. It went on to become the most popular new show of the 2009-10 television season with an average audience of 17 million viewers and to earn an Emmy Awards nomination for Outstanding Reality Program in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014, winning the category in 2012 and 2013.

Other international formats from Studio Lambert include Gogglebox, the high profile BAFTA-winning show that observes ordinary people watching and reviewing the week's television, Four in a Bed which has been a multi-series hit on Channel 4 and TF1 and The Great Interior Design Challenge a returning series on BBC2.

The company also produces documentary projects such as How to Get a Council House, the experimental real-time documentary series Seven Days for Channel 4 and a feature documentary on the financial crash called The Flaw which was launched at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2011.

All3Media America

In December 2012, All3Media announced the launch of All3Media America with Lambert as chairman and Eli Holzman as its president.[10] The new Los Angeles-based company is the group's US production 'hub' producing scripted and non-scripted shows from across the All3Media group. Studio Lambert became one of the many All3Media companies using All3A as its US production base.

In March 2014 Lambert and Holzman were rated 6th on The Hollywood Reporter list of the "Top 25 Reality Players of 2014",[11] and in April Lambert became the fifth person to be inducted into the Hall of Fame at the industry's Realscreen Awards.[12]

References

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External links