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Randy Lennox | |
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Nationality | Canadian |
Occupation(s) | Music and Media Executive, Producer |
Board member of | Banff World Media Festival, Music Canada, Canada's Walk of Fame, Roy Thompson Hall, Massey Hall, Smilezone Foundation |
Randy Lennox is a Canadian music and media executive.
He has served as president and CEO Universal Music Canada and president of Bell Media, Canada's largest Music label and media company respectively, working very closely from day one in developing internationally renowned Canadian artists like The Weeknd, Drake, Shawn Mendes, Justin Bieber, Nelly Furtado and Alicia Cara and creating original content for television and film.
Lennox has been described by U2's Bono as a "music maven turned telecommunications mogul," and "a man without whom American and Canadian music would certainly not be the same" by Gene Simmons of Kiss. [1]
Lennox is also involved with many organizations in the Canadian music scene: he is the talent chair and executive producer of Canada's Walk of Fame and served as chair of the Massey & Roy Thomson Hall's Board. [2] In January 2019, he was named the chair of the board for the Banff World Media Festival. [3]
Lennox has been featured four times on Toronto Life Magazine Top most influential list. In 2017 he was awarded the Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award at the 2017 Juno Awards and was recently named Canadian media executive of the year by Playback magazine.
In 2023, Lennox co-founded of LOFT Entertainment Inc, a Music Management and Television Content Company. [ citation needed]
While at Universal, Lennox created the #1 best selling album series in Canadian history with Big Shiny Tunes. [4] [5]
Lennox applied lessons from Big Shiny Tunes to Oh What a Feeling: A Vital Collection of Canadian Music, a Canadian-focused compilation that he assembled to celebrate the Juno Award's 25th Anniversary. The 4-disc box-set was the first-ever Canadian box-set to be certified diamond for sales of over one million copies. [6] Lennox also partnered with CARAS for the album and together raised more than $5.3 million to fund Warchild, Music Counts and other Canadian charities. [7]
In 1998, Universal Music Canada merged with Polygram Canada and at age 36 Lennox appointed as company's president, [8] [9] [1] and then in 2001, president and CEO. [10] [11]
Under Lennox, Universal Music Canada developed many Canadian artists like Justin Bieber, Drake, Sam Roberts, Alessia Cara, The Tenors, The Weeknd, Shawn Mendes, Nelly Furtado and The Tragically Hip, among others, while working closely with long-time Canadian music icons like Shania Twain, Diana Krall and Bryan Adams. [12] Lennox also conceived and produced the Juno Award winning song Wavin' Flag (as performed by the Canadian supergroup Young Artists for Haiti) which raised more than $3 million dollars in disaster relief funds following the 2010 Earthquake in Haiti and the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Games Anthem. [13] [14]
While Lennox was CEO Universal Music Canada was named Music Company of the Year for 16 consecutive years at Canadian Music Week. [15]
In 2015, Lennox joined Bell Media as President, Broadcasting with a five-year mandate to "bring Content based thinking" to Bell Media's original production’s. In this role Lennox brought Bell Media into new markets with Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical and talent competition The Launch, which was picked up and expanded internationally by Sony Pictures Television.
Lennox described world-class original content as the core of his strategy, and focused Bell Media's efforts and investments in production and partnerships to secure exclusive rights to the premium international content while exporting such content to other markets. [16] [17]
In 2017, Lennox was appointed overall president of Bell Media [18] taking responsibility for "strategy and operations for conventional, pay and specialty television, radio, digital media, out-of-home advertising and special projects." [19]
During Lennox's tenure Bell Media dramatically expanded the number of content formats produced, from musical theatre to musical reality tv competition and a number of documentaries. Working with Meat Loaf collaborator Jim Steinman, Lennox co-produced 2017's Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical, a stage adaptation of the 1977 album that received wide acclaim over its runs in London, Toronto and New York. [20] Meanwhile, working with Big Machine Records' Scott Borchetta, Lennox co-created and produced along with Insight Productions the original reality music competition franchise, The Launch, a new format that was picked up by Sony Pictures Television for international distribution. [21] [22]
Bell Media also began producing feature documentaries,produced by Lennox, including the music focused Long Time Running, which featured Tragically Hip, Home Town, a solo acoustic concert story featuring Neil Young, [23] the 2019 documentary David Foster: Off the Record.[ citation needed] Lennox also co-produced Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band. The documentary, co-produced with Martin Scorsese, Ron Howard, and Brian Grazer opened the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, the first-ever opening of the festival by a Canadian documentary. [24]
Lennox also co-produced the 2019 Clive Owen film The Song Of Names with Robert Lantos [25] and Lennox green lit Letterkenny and Canada’s Drag Race as well as dramas including Cardinal, Transplant and Frontier. Working with singer-songwriter Jann Arden, in 2018 Lennox also executive produced Jann, an original TV series featuring Arden playing a fictionalized version of herself. Premiering in early 2019, the first season would become "most-watched" Canadian television series and comedy of the year. [26] [27] In October 2020, Hulu acquired American distribution rights to the series. [28]
In line with both his original and expanded mandates, Lennox made a number of deals designed to increase Bell Media's library of exclusive content. Starting with internet radio's iHeartMedia and the Just For Laughs comedy festival, [29] Lennox bolstered Bell Media's library with international partners that would grow to include Lionsgate and Pinewood Studios and premium U.S. television brands Starz, [30] Vice Media [31] and BNN Bloomberg, [32] and HBO [33] and HBO Max. [34]
This increased focus on original content also saw licensing deals with streaming competitor Netflix [35] and production for American filmmaking magnate Jeffrey Katzenberg. [36]
In 2019, citing a scarcity of studio space in Toronto's $2 billion film and television industry, [37] Lennox led Bell Media's majority acquisition and subsequent expansion of Toronto's Pinewood Studios. To alleviate its more than two-year backlog, [38] Lennox led a 200,000-square foot production space expansion for Pinewood, for which began construction in November 2020. [39]
In April 2020, Lennox and Bell Media / Insight led a coalition of over 100 media partners in broadcasting Stronger Together, Tous Ensemble, the largest multi-platform broadcast event in Canadian history. [40]
Lennox has described the Canadian streaming landscape as “ under developed,” and that Bell Media could help, [41] and in 2018 rebranded and relaunched the CraveTV service as Crave, a standalone subscription service and the first time Bell had ever unbundled premium content from its wireline products.
In interviews Lennox has described a responsibility to meet customer expectations, [42] and his plan to attract new subscribers with exclusive world-class original content by producing it in house and patterning internationally. [43] By the end of 2020, Crave had amassed nearly 3 million subscribers and was HBO Max's first international launch partner, [34] in addition to earlier partnerships Lennox signed HBO, [33] Starz, Showtime, Vice, TIFF and others. [38]
On April 22, 2020 Bell Media announced Stronger Together, Tous Ensemble, a fundraising concert in support of Food Banks Canada on April 26 became the largest broadcasting event in Canadian history. [44] [40] The event saw all of the competing Canadian media companies working together and led by Bell Media to produce and deliver the disaster response special. [40]
Conceived of and Co-produced by Lennox and Insight Productions, the television special featured over 80 prominent Canadian musicians, artists, activists, actors and athletes including Celine Dion, Chris Hadfield, Michael Bublé, and Drake raising $8.6 million in donations to Food Banks Canada by text. [45] In an interview with FYI Music News, Lennox shared that the entire concert, from conception to broadcast, was assembled in just 12 days, with participants filming their own segments at home and final mastering and mixing being done the day before broadcast. [46]
The event, broadcast simultaneously on over 100 platforms, including television, radio, streaming and on demand, is the largest television event in Canadian history. [40] In all, the 90-minute commercial-free event raised $8.6 million Food Banks Canada. [47] [48]
Lennox continues to produce documentaries, films, TV shows and music, drawing from his longstanding relationships in the entertainment industry. To date as producer Lennox has won 8 Canadian Screen Awards, 2 Juno Awards, and an Emmy Award.
In a pair of 2021 interviews with Playback Magazine [49] and FYI Music News, [50] Lennox remarked that his love for documentary and TV productions had grown to match his love for music. He also detailed a slate of new productions:
The Oh What A Feeling series, produced by Lennox, has raised more than $8.2 million for Canadian charities across several volumes. [7] [52] [53]
Along with industry veterans Bob Ezrin and Gary Slaight, Lennox organized Young Artists for Haiti, a supergroup including Drake, Justin Bieber, Nelly Furtado and Avril Lavigne that recorded a cover of K'naan's " Wavin' Flag" as a charity single in the aftermath of the 2010 Haiti earthquake raising more than two million dollars for disaster relief. [54] [55] [56]
In 2023 Bob Ezrin and Lennox were asked & recreated a new Anthem for mental health based their earlier work Wavin’ Flag.[ citation needed]
Lennox and his Loft Entertainment team worked in partnership with Peacock Alley to create & produce What I wouldn’t do: North Star Calling featuring 50 young Canadian artists.[ citation needed] The song / video that has already had over 2 million YouTube views and has helped raise mental health awareness as part of the Feel out loud campaign currently at $116 million raised with kids help phone.[ citation needed]
Lennox is also a director of the Smilezone Foundation, an organization that donates play zones to hospitals and paediatric care facilities, and sits on the board of CARAS MusiCounts. [57] [58]