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David
Sams is considered one of the world's most respected
marketing strategists, a nine-time
Emmy® award-winning TV producer, and emerging
technologies guru. He has been featured in
TV Guide,
USA Today, and
Entertainment Weekly. He has
appeared on
60
Minutes,
Entertainment Tonight,
The Today Show,
Dateline NBC,
and
World News Tonight.
In the 1980’s,
Sams helped to turn Merv Griffin's
Wheel of Fortune and
Jeopardy into the two
highest-rated shows in syndication history, while head of global
marketing and creative affairs for a family-owned syndication
company called King World. Soon thereafter the company went public
and became the darling of Wall Street and one of the most
profitable companies in the nation. Years later, without a penny of
debt on its books, King World sold for billions of dollars.
In
1986, Sams launched the
Oprah Winfrey Show into national
syndication. His creative marketing efforts made Oprah a household
name even before the talk show host hit the airwaves. She was #1 in
nearly every TV market from her very first day on the air.
Sams
is considered to be one of the greatest marketers in TV syndication
history. He re-invented the way syndicated shows and personalities
are marketed, making a lasting impression on viewers. To this day,
Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy, and the Oprah Winfrey Show remain the
top-rated shows in all of syndication.
As a TV producer,
writer, and director, Sams has won 9 Emmy® Awards. He has produced
news magazines, music programs, reality shows, and documentaries
for multiple networks and syndicators. He is a member of the
Director’s Guild of
America.
As a direct response marketer, Sams is responsible
for over $120,000,000 in sales. He has produced the infomercial of
the year, entertainment infomercial of the year, and program-length
advertisement of the year. In 2005, he won a
Telly award as well as a
US International Film
and Video Festival award for his "Best of Hee Haw" infomercial
for
Time-Life. In
just one year, over 1 million
Hee Haw DVDs were sold. Interactive television that
calls for audience participation (meaning "pull out your credit
card now") is the key to much of Sams’ success.
As a commercial
producer and director, Sams has won multiple awards, including five
Addys. He has also been
honored by the
US Olympic Committee for his
fund-raising efforts, and is featured in
Who's Who in America, Who's Who in
entertainment, and Who's Who in the world.
As an internet
entrepreneur, Sams has launched numerous successful online
ventures. In late 1999, he created an Internet company that
generated over $10,000,000 of revenue in less than 3 months--with
only a half-dozen employees and virtually no marketing costs. He
was instrumental in launching the .cc domain with Clear Channel
Communications, as well as the .tv domain with the dotTV
Corporation. Sams’ portfolio of online properties continues to grow
through both development of original content and acquisitions. He
owns thousands of great domain names, which he refers to as his
“beach front cyber real estate”. Sams is also consulting existing
online companies to help build brand awareness and generate
additional revenues.
Sams has been a major force in the growth
of “family friendly” entertainment media. In 1995, he brought
together eleven major music labels and some 65 recording artists to
release a seven CD compilation titled
Keep the Faith. Marketed under his own
label,
TVFirst, at a
retail price of $124.95, the collection has been certified platinum
by the
RIAA, with over
1,000,000 albums sold. Most recently, Sams created music
compilations for Time Life and
Sony, featuring superstar artists
Christina
Aguilera,
American Idol's
Ruben Studdard,
Gloria Estefan,
Patti
LaBelle,
Wynonna,
and
Sarah
McLachlan--just to name a few.
Sams has created and
produced multiple news magazine programs. In 1991, he created and
executive produced
Trial Watch, which ran for two seasons on the
NBC television network. The daily program covered all of the hot
legal battles of the rich and famous and led to the later
development of networks such as
Court TV.
Sams also created and executive
produced
ETC Newsmagazine, which made national
headlines because of its ongoing coverage of underage teenagers
getting into violent R-rated movies. Sams’ program covered the
issue in-depth, including hidden camera footage of kids
continuously gaining admission to movies without question from
theater ticket sellers. The
Clinton White House turned to Sams for his
special coverage in an effort to challenge theater owners to change
and police their ticket-selling policies to minors. Following a
special screening of Sams’ ETC NewsMagazine, which also aired in
prime time on
PAX TV,
President Clinton announced pledges by thousands of members of the
National Association Theater Owners that they would require photo
identification from young people for R-rated movies. This policy is
strictly enforced today.
Sams is also very instrumental in
raising awareness and money for numerous non-profit organizations.
He has been honored by the U.S. Olympic Committee for his
fund-raising efforts, made significant contributions to
organizations such as
MDA, was
President of Christian Network Holdings, and is one of the founding
members of Operation DVD, an appeal to patriotic Americans to
donate their new and used DVDs which are then shipped to our
fighting men and women overseas. Safe entertainment is a concept
that is difficult at best for our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and
Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even baseball and softball games
are no longer possible because of snipers, mines, bombs and other
terrorist activities.
Sams has strong retail alliances. In 2004
he created and produced a program called DVD Weekend that aired on
the Tribune stations, including
SuperStation WGN. The program enticed
people to run to their phones and computers (via DVDWeekend.com) to
rent and buy their favorite DVDs. Thousands of people did just
that, and within weeks Sams’ wholly-owned DVD Weekend became
WalMart.com’s #3 online affiliate in the entire world.
Most
recently, Sams launched a motion picture company,
God and
Country Pictures, with the intention of producing multiple
movies for the big screen over the next 3 years.
Sams has
consulted a vast array of broadcasters and internet companies
including:
CBS,
Clear Channel,
Westinghouse,
Motown,
Warner Music,
Paxson
Communications,
dotTV Corporation,
Time-Life,
Integrity
Publishers,
Sony, and many
others. He has worked on behalf of many entertainers, from
Michael
Jackson to
Garth Brooks. Today, he is consulting some of
the world's top companies in the development of digital television
brand channels.
Sams got into the media business by selling
freelance photos of local high school sporting events to a local,
Columbus,
Ohio newspaper when he was just 13 years old. A year later, the
editor of the paper asked him to write an entertainment column for
teenage moviegoers. Sams jumped at the idea when he realized that
he’d never have to pay for a movie or concert ticket again. The
column was so popular that it was syndicated to other papers.
At
age 15, Sams moved into radio, hosting a morning radio show for a
small station in Columbus, Ohio. He then anchored a local community
newscast. Soon thereafter, he moved into commercial TV, creating a
magazine show that put him on the list of "People to watch" by
Columbus
Monthly magazine. He went on to create numerous shows
throughout Ohio, and became executive producer and head of
marketing for
WBNS-TV in
Columbus, where he drove that station’s Eyewitness News to a 53
share at 6 p.m., making it the highest-rated local newscast in the
entire nation.
Of course, there are those programs in Sams’
career that he’ll never quite live down. At about age 20, Sams
created the very first Tabloid TV show in the world, Frong Page
Saturday Night, which aired in Ohio. The program became so popular
that it actually garnered as high as a 40 share in prime access. He
also produced and was color commentator of a national TV show
called Rollergames--where skaters had to maneuver around the Wall
of Death, and keep from falling into the live Alligator Pit. After
screening the program, one newspaper reviewer wrote that Sams was
personally responsible for the decline of the western
civilization!
In 2003, Sams ran for
Governor of
California, but lost to mega-movie star
Arnold
Schwarzenegger. While he may have lost the election, he has one
incredible scrapbook for his two children.
Sams also authored
Wheel of Fortune: How to Get on and Play the Game, published by St.
Martins Press. He is currently working on his second non-fiction
book.
References