Tom Mockridge


Thomas Mockridge was the chief executive of Virgin Media until June 2019.

Career

Mockridge began his career in his native New Zealand; starting in 1977 as a reporter for the New Plymouth-based Taranaki Daily News in the small central North Island town of Taumarunui.
He moved to Australia in 1980, working first for the Sydney Morning Herald as economics correspondent, then as an adviser for the Australian Treasurer Paul Keating. He also worked for The Australian. He joined News Limited in January 1991, where he was assistant CEO to Ken Cowley until 1996. He then became CEO of Foxtel, a post which he held for three years. Mockridge then moved to Hong Kong.
Appointed managing director of Independent Newspapers in 2001, New Zealand's largest newspaper publisher and a subsidiary of News Corporation, he was also appointed Chairman of pay TV group Sky New Zealand.
In 2002, Mockridge led the merger between Stream TV and Tele+, which resulted in the creation of Sky Italia. On completion of the merger, he was appointed CEO of Sky Italia. In 2008 Mockridge was appointed Managing Director of European Television, reporting to James Murdoch. He was later appointed to the board of British Sky Broadcasting, a position he still holds.
He was head of Sky Italia when he replaced Rebekah Brooks as chief executive of News International after she had resigned on 15 July 2011. He was resident in Italy.
On 17 January 2012 he appeared before the Leveson Inquiry into media ethics. He eventually backed Lord Justice Brian Leveson's recommendation that the UK set up a regulatory system for reining in the British media's worst excesses.
In December 2012 he resigned from his position as head of Murdoch's UK newspapers, having been passed over as for the new chief executive position.

Virgin Media

In June 2013 he took up the post of chief executive of Virgin Media, following the completion of the takeover by Liberty Global leaving in 2019 to be replaced by Lutz Schuler.

Personal life

His wife is an Italian citizen. They have two children.