Michael Acton Smith | |
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Born | 1974 (age 49–50) |
Michael Acton Smith OBE (born 1974) is the co-CEO and co-founder of Calm, a meditation space company.[1] He is also the founder of Firebox.com,[2] and founder and chairman of children's entertainment company Mind Candy which the created the video game Moshi Monsters.[3] He has been described by The Daily Telegraph as "a rock star version of Willy Wonka"[4] and by The Independent as "a polite version of Bob Geldof."[5]
In 1998, Acton Smith co-founded online gadget and gift retailer Firebox.com with Tom Boardman.[6] In 2004, Firebox was listed on The Sunday Times' 'Fast Track 100' list of the fastest growing, privately owned business in the UK.[7]
In 2004, Acton Smith secured $10M backing and launched Mind Candy.[8] The company launched alternate reality game Perplex City, a global treasure hunt with £100,000 buried somewhere in the world that played out across various media including websites, text messages, magazines, live events, skywriting and multiple helicopters. The game was nominated for a BAFTA award in 2006.[9] After three years (and $9M spent) Perplex City was placed on indefinite hold.[5]
In 2007 Acton Smith launched online world Moshi Monsters. In 2013, it had over 90 million users around the world.[10] The online world shut down in 2019.[11] It has expanded offline[12] into selling a range of products including toys, a kids magazine in the UK,[13] a DS video game,[14] a top 5 music album which has gone gold in the UK,[15] books, membership cards, and trading cards. In December 2013, Moshi Monsters teamed with Universal to release a full-length feature movie.[16]
In late 2012 Acton Smith co-founded Calm.com, along with Alex Tew.[17] In 2013 the company announced a $450,000 funding round from a group of Angel investors.[18] By 2015, Calm had reached 2 million downloads worldwide and, after winning a British competition, launched the world's first "slow TV Ad".[19] That same year, Acton Smith released a book with Penguin called Calm: Calm the Mind, Change the World.[20] It was published in 12 countries.[21]
In July 2017, the release of Baa Baa Land, an eight-hour slow cinema film, was announced with Acton Smith as Executive Producer.[22]
Acton Smith is also the founder of Ping Pong Fight Club,[23] Silicon Drinkabout,[24] and the Berwickstock Festival.[25] He was awarded a BAFTA in 2013 for Moshi Monsters[26] and was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2014 New Year Honours for services to the creative industries.[27]