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Emmy award-winning TV news producer Tammi Leader Fuller walked away from a 34-year career to found Campowerment – a summer sleepaway camp-like experience—aimed at helping women find fulfillment and purpose. Discover how the mom of two got the guts to do it and how—even though she has had to dramatically scale back her life to follow her dream — her life now is the most fulfilling it has ever been.

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Tammi Leader – Campowerment

In 2013, after three decades as an award-winning Television Producer, Tammi Leader took a huge leap of faith, stepping out of the TV Studio and back into …

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Source: campowerment.com

Date Published: 4/11/2021

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Tammi Leader Fuller (@tampowerment) • Instagram photos …

1343 Followers, 671 Following, 570 Posts – See Instagram photos and veos from Tammi Leader Fuller (@tampowerment)

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Date Published: 12/14/2022

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Tammi Leader – Founder – Campowerment – LinkedIn

Tammi Leader · Founder @ Campowerment | Emmy-Award Winning xTV Producer | Purpose-instigator | Proud mom · Articles by Tammi · Activity · Experience · Education.

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Date Published: 1/16/2022

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Tammi Leader Fuller: Books – Amazon.com

Dethroning Your Inner Critic: The Four-Step Journey from Self-Doubt to Self-Empowerment. by Joanna Kleinman and Tammi Leader Fuller | Nov 27, 2020.

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Date Published: 1/1/2022

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Tammi Leader Fuller – Campowerment | S7 E02

If you are committed to ‘choosing your own adventure’ you’ll want to tune in immediately to TOB’s conversation with Tammi Leader Fuller, …

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Source: www.twooldbitches.com

Date Published: 6/22/2022

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Tammi Leader Fuller – HarperCollins Publishers

Tammi Leader Fuller has been “making news” in South Flora for twenty-five years. Her television career began with a summer internship at WLPG (ABC), …

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Meet Tammi Leader Fuller | Founder – SHOUTOUT LA

Meet Tammi Leader Fuller | Founder · Hi Tammi, have you ever found yourself in a spot where you had to dece whether to give up or keep going?

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Life and Work with Tammi Leader Fuller – Voyage LA Magazine

Today we’d like to introduce you to Tammi Leader Fuller. She and her team share her story with us below. Please kick things off for us with …

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SheSez - Ep18 - Tammy Leader Fuller
SheSez – Ep18 – Tammy Leader Fuller

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  • Author: SheSez
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  • Date Published: 2017. 11. 13.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QheAsNE43zA

Tammi Leader

In 2013, after three decades as an award-winning Television Producer, Tammi Leader took a huge leap of faith, stepping out of the TV Studio and back into nature to create Campowerment, the purveyor of live and transformative, expert-led experiences, powered by play!

After moving from her hometown of Miami to Los Angeles to develop a health & wellness show for Telepictures (Warner Brothers) designed to help people live life bigger and better, with help from game-changing experts in every area of growth, Tammi was at the top of her career, and yet deeply unhappy. At 53, she set out to find that “happy place” within herself, so she went back to her roots…to the place of her happiest childhood memories: summer camp.

In partnership with her College Professor mother (Grandy) and Brand Strategist oldest daughter (Chelsea), and the support of her entire family, Tammi created a new concept, live and off-air: a sleepaway-camp-inspired experience where grown-up women (like her) could re-ignite their lives.

Enter: Campowerment, where Tammi invited in the power players who had impressed and inspired her during her many years at The TODAY Show, NBC News, CBS News, America’s Most Wanted, and EXTRA TV.

From the very beginning, Campowerment was meant to be a a reimagined place of joy, where women could flock to (re)find their purpose and their people. Where sweatpants could be the great equalizer, and where women who are overwhelmed by life’s ups and downs could see they’re not alone (and actually, they’re in great company!).

Why camp, this way? Because camp friends are the best friends of all, and camp + experts = clarity, on so many levels.

This new passion project, which became a business in 2013 when O Magazine named it one of the 50 things that made Oprah say, “Wow,” was the culmination of Tammi’s highest skills and most beloved concepts.

From the beginning, Campowerment has been hailed as the place where women go to celebrate sisterhood, find community, and start living the life they’ve been dreaming about…right now. This unique and fun-loving approach to transformation has been featured in Forbes, Fortune, and Parade Magazines, the TODAY Show, CNN, The Hollywood Reporter, The LA Times, Miami Herald, Reader’s Digest and lots s’more.

Since 2015, Campowerment has been customizing its tried-and-true approach to programming for businesses and organizations seeking to connect and empower their people, too. In fact, Campowerment has worked with clients (not just women!), like lululemon, Nestle USA, Snap Inc, government agencies, non-profits, professional associations, fashion brands and advertising agencies.

In so many ways Tammi couldn’t see at the time, this journey has been the natural progression of where her life was headed for a long time. Way back in 2005, “Tammi from Miami” embarked on this mission help propel others forward when she collaborated with five accomplished South Florida business women — known as the “Miami Bombshells” — on a book, “Dish and Tell” (Harper Collins), a memoir of honest, real-life anecdotes to help women understand that they are not alone in their struggle to juggle all that life throws their way.

Through all of it, Tammi’s strongest muscle? Resilience. A single mom of two, her life has crashed and burned more than once, but Tammi has always found a way to rise. In person and online, for Campowerment and for other organizations that invite her to catalyze growth for their members or employees, Tammi leads sessions on building that resilience muscle, on purpose, on journaling and on connection (via fun & games!).

She’s currently working on a book about resilience and the power of kindred connection. We think her story has only just begun…

Tammi Leader Fuller – Campowerment

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Idelisse & Joanne: Welcome to Two Old Bitches. I’m Idelisse Malave and I’m Joanne Sandler. And we’re Two Old Bitches. We’re interviewing our women friends and women who could be our friends. Listen, as they share stories about how they reinvent themselves.

Tammi: I never in a bajillion years, thought that I would be able at 62, I would be reinventing myself again and again and again, and every year. And with each thing. It’s more exciting for me. And I feel, I feel for the first time, like my wisdom that I have accrued over these years is finally getting to apply.

Joanne: It’s such a joy to be here recording with you for Season Seven.

Idelisse: It’s been so long since I saw you last. But it is exciting, isn’t it?

Idelisse & Joanne: It is exciting. And this episode where we’re talking to Tammi Leader… I love that name, Tammi Leader, given what she does, what a gift. Yes.

Joanne: You’re right. Tammi Leader, who is the co-founder of Campowerment for women. And I love it for a lot of reasons. It was such a joy to talk to Tammi. She found us, which was wonderful. And you and I have spent nearly a lifetime creating venues where we bring women together.

Idelisse: And, you know, it’s the facilitation, if you will, work that we do, but managing that energy drawing from that energy, all of that alchemy that happens in groups.

Idelisse & Joanne: And I think what’s different is when we have done this in the past, it’s been about bringing a group together for collective ends and goals. Right? It’s about gender change. We were it’s about women in the arts …social justice.

Idelisse: What, and this, this time, I think what they do at Campowerment is they bring women together and yes, there are collective ends, but they’re secondary what’s primary are women’s wants and needs and their own personal development.

Joanne: Right. And particularly poignant. And for me an opportunity to learn, to talk to Tammi about this at a time like COVID over the past 18 months when people it’s been so hard to bring people together, it’s been so hard to be in the same space together. So, you know, we use Zoom, et cetera, but wonderful, wonderful to learn from her and to hear about how they’re doing it for fun.

Idelisse: And it’s so much about play, which is what people are going to get to hear today.

Joanne: And so we start by asking Tammi, our classic question, who are you?

Tammi: My name is Tammi Leader and I am the founder of Campowerment we are a community of purpose driven women who come together to learn, connect, and grow around the power of playtime. So who am? I for 34 years, I was a television news producer. I spent almost 20 years at The Today Show and I worked on a lot of shows like America’s Most Wanted and CBS 48 Hours and a lot of local news stuff.

I was an investigative news producer chasing bad guys, but I woke up one day and said, you know, the world women need guidance and women are not happy today. And in 2005, I wrote a book with five other women in Miami about how having it all, isn’t having it all at all and how having enough should be enough.

And what happened is this groundswell of women started to come out and say, you’re right. You know, I’m walking around with a mask on going, I’m good, all is well, and I’m imploding inside. So how do I get happy? And because my background is in television, I had connected with all of these brilliantly empowering and insightful experts in a bajillion fields.

And I used to prepare them to be on TV. I would teach them, sort of had a cull down what they were saying into an 8 second soundbite. I’m not doing very well with that right now, because I’m going on and on. But I would say to them, this is brilliant. And I’m going to, and I’m coming back for you one day, because one day I loved summer camp as a child.

And I say, I used to tell them one day, I’m going to do summer camps for grownups. And I am going to bring back all of the brilliant women that I have met in my career. And when you put someone on The Today Show and their career explodes and launches, they’re very much grateful. And so I used to say to them, I’m coming back one day for you to pay it forward and share your wisdom with women who ordinarily might not have access to you.

And so that’s what we did. I combined the idea of summer camp fun and games around impactful experience and experiential experience of play and groundedness and a feeling that we’re all the same.

I started this with my mom, who was a college professor, who was in her late seventies at the time. And she and I had a foundation many years ago here in Miami when we worked together. When I lived here in South Florida. And it was for abused and neglected kids. And we really built it from the, it was a grassroots foundation and we used to say, wouldn’t it be great to work together?

And I said, I’m a journalist and you’re a college professor, how can we ever blend our skills? And then this idea came up after we had written this book, we started to…we launched the book on national TV and people started writing us and saying, I want to, I have friends, I have people in my life, but I want to be with women who I don’t know, who don’t know me.

It’s like the stranger on an airplane theory. I want to be with people who are not going to judge me and who are going to accept me for sort of who I am and what I am and they’re not going to tell when I share. And when you open up the space for people, to be honest and real, it’s amazing, the magic that happens when they know they’re safe.

Idelisse: And that book has a great name, doesn’t it?

Tammi: Uh, the book was called The Miami Bombshells and it was about, and they called us bombshells. It was published by Harper Collins and they called us bombshells, not because we thought we were hot babes, cause we weren’t, although we were inside. It was about dropping bombshells in areas that people didn’t ordinarily talk about 15, 16, 17 years ago.

Now, women are much more willing to be vulnerable and to share. Although we found that women really are not so willing to talk about some of the mistakes they made and some of the things that have happened until somebody we know has the same experience. If, if you, if your partner was cheating on you, you’re not going to go share that.

But when someone says my partner cheated on me, the first thing women do is jump in and say, let me tell you how I got through this. So we, as women want to help each other.

I love the idea of putting people together and, you know, and, and with bringing so many different experiences to life. And when we started Campowerment, which started in 2013, my mom and I started it together, uh, one of the first rules was you can’t say what you do for a living for the first 24 hours.

And after that, no one cares. And it’s really, we have women have come to, to learn that we are, who, what we do. It’s four days and three nights, whole nights, and every, it’s a choose your own adventure kind of experience. So you, we usually bring in about a dozen experts in all kinds of fields, running the gamut of areas of life. They’re Ted Talkers, they’re game changers, they’re bestselling authors. There they’re thought leaders and people who can help steer us in a direction.

But because I’m a producer, everything we do is so highly interactive and it’s all sort of wrapped around the idea of play and fun. So you don’t realize how deep you’re digging. So we go deep and then we play and then we go deep and then we play. And so you can break down walls when you’re being silly.

We split the camp in half. Each one has a different color. We play silly interactive games, some of them deep and poignant, you know, some of them pie eating contest or throw a, you know, you put a shower cap on your head with shaving cream and you toss Cheetos and whoever gets the finishes, the bag of Cheetos on the head runs and does a relay.

Oh that’s my favorite! The egg toss, I loved egg tosses.

Tammi: We do, that’s part of the fun, is to create the silly part of being young again. And a lot of people, there are a lot of women whose childhoods weren’t so great. So it’s not, oh, let’s be a 12 year old and do that. It’s we can rewrite our stories if our childhood wasn’t so great.

Or if we did, we grew up thinking who we are, who we are, or who we were told we needed to be. This is a place where you can go. We, it’s, we do nothing more than open a door to experiences to invite women to walk through.

Idelisse: So, I’m hearing two things. One is the power of play and the ability to reinvent and learn, right? When you’re in that place of playing. Right? When you let go of some of the restraints when you’re not playing, but I’m also hearing this sense of, because you show up there and they may come back. I don’t know if they come back or not?

Tammi: Oh yeah, 60% of them come back…

Idelisse: There you go. Um, but it’s still a group of people who are not in your everyday life and who, the mirror they hold up to you is a very different mirror, right? Then the people that have known you for 30 or 40 years, right? Who still think of you as that person, right? These people see you with a fresher eye, and that allows you to see yourself with a fresher eye. Am I getting some of this?

Tammi: A hundred percent and it also helps the, the other point is community. We build these communities, these micro-communities within the communities at our camps. There are about 150 people. So we build communities in cabins. We are very mindful about who we place in cabins. We don’t put all the young moms together and all the retired executives in the finance industry. No. We shake it all up, the intergenerational…

Idelisse: What is the age range?

Tammi: 21 to 80, if you can believe it. Yeah. And our average is about 45 to 65. So it’s women who are, really, most of them are women who have really achieved something, whether it is, you know, in their career or mentally or within their families, and are looking now to say, I want it, there’s gotta be more to life than what I’m doing and what I’m experiencing.

And when COVID hit, um, we pivoted to digital only because we had dozens and dozens and dozens of women writing us saying I’m alone, I don’t…this could last two weeks. I don’t know how long this, this quarantine things…

Idelisse: How many camps did you do a year? Was it just one?

Tammi: We had over, we’ve had over 50 events over the seven years. So we did quite a few each year, all over the country. In the beginning, we rented out children’s summer camps in the off season. They were empty shells and we would come in and really decorate them and make them fun and funky and adult like. But they were…it’s still camp. It was still the idea of being in nature and nature, we don’t get out and play in nature enough, but being outside and just, you know, being together like that in experiences is that we call it a choose your own adventure because every hour and a half there are four or five choices of what you get to do. And, you know, you can go to a class about how to have hard conversations about sex with a sex therapist, or you could go to how to not become your parents if you’re, you know, so if you’re not a parent, you’re not going to go to that one.

Or if you’re, we can, we do tightening your downstairs with a pelvic floor dysfunction, physical therapists, you know? So like those are three of maybe the five choice.

Joanne: So Tammi, I have to ask you in these kind of fraught political times, how do you deal with politics?

Tammi: We don’t. I’ll tell ya. The weekend of November, 2016, we chose that weekend in 2014 in Malibu two years ahead because we have to book these camps out a couple of years ahead. Retreats are very, are big business now. We don’t own our own place.

We move around. So two years before we made the decision that we were going to do with the weekend after the election, because we were going to celebrate the first woman president. Then that Tuesday came and we had an event on Thursday and we had to declare, this is a no politics zone. We are not going to discuss politics because politics has nothing to do with, we’re talking about reinventing ourselves and it’s not that we don’t want to make the world a better place, but we had a lot of pushback in the beginning. We need a place to vent we’re pissed. And so we make it very clear that politics is completely off limits. And, you know, with all that’s happened in the last year and a half, we’ve had to hold back.

We had something called inner circle. And we originally started that because it was when people would leave the camp after three intense days, they would say I’ve learned so much. How am I going to take this into the real world when nobody else has been experiencing what I have. So we started something called the inner circle.

We put people together who had been to camp, cause we thought you would had to, it had, have had that Campowerment experience in order to really relate to each other online. They didn’t know each other anyway, we chose groups based on when’s your availability. Oh, your Wednesday, noon to two, we can, you know, we’ll put you together.

So everybody had had that camp experience. So they understood the idea that when there’s a circle, what this are, our circles are like Vegas. What happens in the circle stays in the circle. You’re not allowed to go back to your cabin and talk about what just happened here. There’s a, you know, a sanctity.

So many of the people who are part of our community are desperate for community right now, we need to connect with like-minded people that are different than we are, whose paths would never ordinarily cross ours in our normal life. And that I think is what’s really been a beautiful…

Idelisse: I really want to ask you about this. So you mentioned, you know, you were in television for 35 years and you’ve been doing this for seven years, so I’m going to guess you’re in your early sixties?

Tammi: Yep, 62.

Idelisse: 62, right? Um, the name of this podcast is Two Old Bitches. Right?

Tammi: Well I’m one of you, we’re now Three Old Bitches.

Idelisse: That’s what I wanted to ask you. You know, one of the ways I could, some people hear that name and they’re like, you know, they’re oh, me too, right? Other people don’t. So, um, would you rather be called an old lady or an old bitch?

Tammi: You want to know the truth?

Idelisse: Yes.

Tammi: I’m not going to say it, that word that my mother used to say was reserved for special people starts with a C? You could call me that.

Idelisse: Oh I know that word.

Tammi: You know that word? I don’t care what they call me as long as they know that at 62 life is just beginning. I have a whole new chapter that’s opening up for me and I never in a bajillion years thought that I would be able, that at 62, I would be reinventing myself again and again and again, and every year. And with each thing I, it’s more exciting for me. And I feel, I feel for the first time, like my wisdom that I have accrued over these years is finally getting to apply and I call this, so I teach a class called re-invention and it’s using a lot of what I learned in television.

Idelisse: So when Tammi shares and highlights, and I love this, the importance of identifying and sharing for women, those things that we’re good at.

Joanne: Yeah, it’s that thing, you know, we are hard on ourselves. Many, many people, many of my friends our friends,right? Are the biggest judgers of their own inadequacies. Often surprising you, you see one of our friends who has accomplished so much who’s so interesting and fascinating and courageous. And when you hear their own narrative about themselves…

Idelisse: …it’s all about, you know, what all of their deficiencies and whatever and inadequacies. Uh, so I think it’s interesting here to lift up, you know, what is it about Tammi? What did she bring to creating, and not by herself, but she sounds like the leading force Campowerment what kind of person does that?

Tammi: I’m the one who, when we’re sitting around, okay, rate your life on a scale of one to 10. What is it? I was asking my friends at 20 years ago. So I like to game-ify things because I think it’s just much more fun than sitting around talking about what did you do last week? So it’s fun and games, it’s storytelling, which I think can help market and package it.

I worked with my mom and now I work with my 33 year old daughter, who was my CEO. I work for her now. Um, my mom unfortunately has since passed away. And so she was our, our wise village elder who had such an incredible, she came to every camp and everybody loved her. She taught people how to journal. And when she passed away, almost 50 people flew into Miami for her funeral, from camps. I mean, Campowerment people who didn’t know our family.

I totally believe in magic. And I believe that if you can tap into a side and you know, again, this is, we were not, when I got interviewed for Oprah magazine, it was like, we are not a spiritual place. We don’t drink green juices here, but what we have since learned is that, no, we don’t drink green juices there, but we have helped people understand and recognize the power that there may be more to life than what they see right now.

And so I believe that magic can happen when you open yourself up to opportunities and possibilities that are completely foreign to you. And so we are pros at crafting experiences and possibilities that most people would not come across (inaudible).

Idelisse: This past year of many of us, being locked down one way or another and more isolation than we’ve ever…most of us have ever known, um, this disruption of life, as we know it. Right. And the slow return of more familiar things, you know, as you said, old people are going out on Friday night instead of, you know, doing a Zoom, right? They’re actually…what’s pulling, what’s calling you forward? You know, when you look to this new, normal, this, you know, this new future or a different future, um, what, what most in there intrigues you or calls you forward?

Tammi: That’s a great question. Actually I think the idea of…it’s been a heavy year. It’s been, you know, leading up to this year has been super heavy.

I just read today that this week is the 50th anniversary of Marvin Gaye’s, uh, What’s Going On that song and where are we compared to where we were? We’re no better than we were at. We’re probably worse than we were 50 years ago. Uh, and so the idea is the world is really a scary place and I think people are emerging from this whole thing, looking at their life from 30,000 feet and going, where do I fit in here? And what have I been doing? What can I do next that can really leave my legacy? My mother was so much about legacy. And so I’m all about creating a legacy, not just for myself, but for helping other people create their own legacies.

What do you want to be remembered for? We are only here for this short time on earth. And what is it that you want to do to make an impact that you want people to remember you? The people who love you and, and what is it that you can do that is kind and loving and giving that you can leave for others.

Every one of us has a gift. Every one of us who’s listening right now has something that they are hoarding, that they are not sharing with the world because they don’t realize that the world needs it. And so I believe that in my, for my future, I believe that I want to share with women, especially the idea that the whole world is waiting for you. What the fuck are you waiting for?

Idelisse: Tammi, her energy is just so contagious.

Joanne: It’s such a positive experience to spend an hour talking to her and just imagining what it would be like to be in a Campowerment.

Idelisse: And to play, the chance to play with her and the other women would be just amazing. So we encourage you to check out Campowerment.

It might work for you. Um, we’re certainly curious about. And also, we want to encourage you to follow us,Two Old Bitches podcast on whatever platform, iTunes, Spotify, wherever you listen, click that follow button for Two Old Bitches.

Joanne: Right, because we know that will work for you and also contact us, click our contact button, let us know what you’re thinking, what you were experiencing, the kinds of shows you’d like to hear, the kinds of risks you’re taking in your life. And as always, we want to end by thanking. Two incredible young bitches.

Idelisse: Very big team. We’re now a team of four.

Joanne: So thank you to Katherine Heller coming to you from Brooklyn, who does so much of the work to make Two Old Bitches sound the way it does.

Idelisse & Joanne: And thanks to Loubna Bouajaj and thanks to you Idelisse! And thanks to you, Joanne!

It is a really great, small, great team. See you next time.

Tammi Leader Fuller

Tammi Leader Fuller has been “making news” in South Florida for twenty-five years. Her television career began with a summer internship at WLPG (ABC), when riots had the city of Miami in flames and hundreds of Cuban rafters washing ashore every single day in what was eventually dubbed the Mariel Boat Lift. She left local news after a couple of years to teach topless aerobics at a Club Med village in the Caribbean, then snapped back to reality and moved to New York, to become Bureau Chief for the Nightly Business Report, a nationally syndicated show on PBS. But eventually, Miami called her back home, and she jumped right back into producing newscasts for WTVJ (CBS/NBC) in 1984, spending a decade there, producing, writing and managing their special projects unit. She received various accolades for her work, including two Emmy Awards. In 1992, Tammi started her own production company, producing hundreds of stories for NBC’s The Today Show, the NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, MSNBC and CNBC, as well as Fox’s America’s Most Wanted, and 48 Hours on CBS. She remains a regular contributor to the Today Show and the nationally syndicated entertainment program, Extra. In the past couple of years, Tammi has steered her company into a completely different direction, taking on the challenge of producing Corporate Marketing Videos and Travel Diaries for various resorts across the globe. Over the past two years, Tammi in Miami Productions has expanded to include six employees and a state of the art post production studio.

Meet Tammi Leader Fuller | Founder

We had the good fortune of connecting with Tammi Leader Fuller and we’ve shared our conversation below.

Hi Tammi, have you ever found yourself in a spot where you had to decide whether to give up or keep going? How did you make the choice?

We created Campowerment in 2013 as a transformational playground to help women learn, connect and grow, in the spirit of the childhood summer camp experience. Powered by joy and playtime, through the lens of community and game-changing, Expert-led programming, in dozens of fields covering 7 distinct areas of life. Campowerment has helped to empower thousands of women to become better humans, partners, leaders, parents, volunteers, employees, managers, and all around contributors, to help make not only their own lives, but the world, a better place, With a 55 percent retention rate, our people have taken quantum leaps forward, on purpose. In November 2016, as we were setting up at our homebase at Camp Hilltop in Malibu, awaiting the arrival of 160 “campers”, the Woolsey Fire was headed right for us.. We evacuated safely, but the next day, the place was decimated, taking with it much of what our business owned (including our storage facility). Amazingly, our people rallied to save us, raising more than $70k to help us rise from the ashes and keep us in business That’s the power of community, and why we didn’t give up, holding two makeup retreats in 2019, one in March in Lake Arrowhead and another in November in Ojai.

In 2020, when COVID hit., heeding our campers’ requests to stay connected, we pivoted our in-person retreat business to a highly interactive, LIVE programming model that connects women to more than 60 experts, and to each other, in a way that they can be seen and heard. Campowerment.com has become a thriving member-based community that is keeping people together, no matter how far apart, and inspired, from the comfort of their own “cabins”. At at a time when women have never needed connection and empowerment more.

Alright, so let’s move onto what keeps you busy professionally?

After 34 years as a Television Producer, nearly 20 of those at the TODAY Show, I had seen too many women like me, struggling to juggle life as we were taught to live it, and I took a giant leap. Backwards in time, as a meaningful way to propel life forward. I created Campowerment to help people disconnect and recalibrate, with themselves, and to each other. To take women back to a grown up version of my all time favorite childhood experience: summer camp. No phones. Just powerful, game-changing programs, led by experts in dozens of fields, out in nature, sharing life’s lessons wrapped in fun and games. In the spirit of the campfire. Phones off. Sweats on. Ready to grow.

In the Fall of 2012, I walked out of a Warner Brothers Studio and into the great outdoors, to help women shift into self-care and companies transform their cultures at Campowerment: these weekend, sleepaway camp-inspired, and luxuriously decadent retreats and Corporate Wellness experiences. B2B, we create innovative, custom-curated retreats packing a powerfully built, Expert-led curriculum, wrapped around the power of playtime. Designed to move the needle on any business. Or woman seeking to put herself at the top of her to-do, and regain her personal power.hether it’s a one day offsite at a kids’ summer camp or a 2-3 day upscale retreat at a 5 star Guest Ranch, the Campowerment for women and as a unique interactive Business experience is one where trust and meaningful connections are built, on purpose. It began as a women’s retreat in 2013 and has ultimately turned into a movement of 5000 plus happy campers, after 25 retreats and some serious love and shout outs from Oprah, MORE and Parade Magazines, the TODAY Show, FOX and Friends, The Hollywood Reporter, LA Times, Miami Herald, Forbes and Fortune Magazines. By 2018, we were producing custom Corporate Campowerment retreats for Nestle, Snapchat, Lululemon, and a host of other LA-based companies, connecting their people on a deeper level, to redesign roadmaps, and thrive through uncertainty. And now, we’re bringing Campowerment.com to life virtually, in an interactive way that’s redefining community and the enormous power of connection as we once knew it. It’s been a long 9 months in isolation, and many more of us “get it” now, and are finding our place with our people, even if they’re thousands of miles apart. That’s why our online community-based growth idea is exploding.

Let’s say your best friend was visiting the area and you wanted to show them the best time ever. Where would you take them? Give us a little itinerary – say it was a week long trip, where would you eat, drink, visit, hang out, etc.

First stop: Koreatown, to the Natura Korean Spa for a full day of pampering, starting with the deep salt scrub that will remove more yuck than you ever imagined was living on your skin. Then to the hot salt rooms, with a few jolts of the cold room in between. Crash out and chill on a comfy recliner in the quiet area of Barcoloungers, after some Korean treats to fill your belly. My fave is the refreshing crushed ice fruit salad. Steam and jacuzzi follow a deep deep massage and you’ll go home wiped out, ready for a good night’s sleep. The Pier at Hermosa Beach is my #1 So Cal oceanfront spot. No better place to watch beachvolleyball, and the sunsets are ridiculous. It’s one of the few places in LA you can actually dine outside and see the ocean. Silvio’s Brazilian BBQ is the South Bay’s best kept secret. Best chicken ever. Ask for the Ipanema salad dressing on the side. I usually get a pint of it to take home. If you’re an early riser, hit Java Man on Pier Avenue for the most delish breakfast turkey and egg burrito north of the border. Wanna sit right off the Strand? Try breakfast outside at Good Stuff. I dig their their healthy breakfast fajitas and they make fresh muffins every day. Get there early. If you’re into strolling on the beach at night, get in line for dessert. The Baked Bear makes more than a dozen kinds of cookies and brownies. Pick two and they’ll carefully place a scoop of killer ice cream in between, and THEN roll the outside in any topping you choose, before it all goes on a panini press to heat up the cookies. I mean.

When in Weho, a night at Hamburger Mary’s on Santa Monica Blvd is a must. Drag Queen bingo is hilarious, but be prepared to be toyed with. There is no better outdoor market for funky vintage furniture, clothes, jewelry, shoes and whatever else you never imagined you needed than the Sunday Flea Market at Fairfax High School. Best two dollars you’ll ever spend in LA. If it’s holiday time, stop by Hollywood United Methodist Church and help them feed the homeless. I spend Christmas Day there every year and the party is epic. It’s the big church at the corner of Franklin and La Brea, with the giant AIDS ribbon on the tower, Movie night at the Hollywood Cemetery is always a great adventure, and I personally love to follow the bouncing ball on the huge screens at The Hollywood Bowl every summer at the annual Sound of Music sing along night. Weekdays, if I’m up early, I’ll head downtown and hit the LA Flower Market. Best succulents in LA, and maybe the cheapest too. Paddle boating in a flamingo on the little Lake in Echo Park is a relaxing way to appreciate our omnipresent 72 and sunny… get out on the water for less than 20 bucks. Wheel Fun Rentals. It’s wheely fun.. Culver City Park hosts an awesome ropes course, owned and operated by Fulcrum Adventures. They’re fabulous. Their inspired team will coach you through their 50 foot ropes course and help you find the courage to take a Leap of Faith you never imagined possible. They run our Challenge Adventure courses at our Campowerment onsites in Malibu and Ojai, and we love them. I’m a Farmer’s Market geek, and in LA, there are no shortage of them. I’ve hit lots of them and if you’re ever at one where you see Harry’s Berries, splurge. Most expensive berries I’ve ever splurged on, but you have never tasted anything like them. I’m from Florida and had never tasted pluots til I got to LA. Fall is prime season for them, and they are my all time favorite California fruit, in any flavor. So much to do here…but when my friends from back east come to town, we need a view. So we head up to Yamashiro for some delish (and pricey!) sushi. But it’s worth it cuz the view is unparalleled. Day or night.

Who else deserves some credit and recognition?

Shoutout to Lisa Gregorisch-Dempsey, Senior Executive Producer at EXTRA/Telepictures/Warner Brothers, my trusted colleague and best friend during my three decades long career as a Television News Producer. Lisa G brought me to LA in 2009, and I worked for her for four years, when I came up with the idea for Campowerment, (www.campowerment.com) She has been one of our biggest cheerleaders. To Jodi Perlman, the owner of SOTO and SOTO Lifestyle Boutiques, for being a huge supporter of Campowerment and Give Her Camp, our 501c3 Foundation that has granted scholarships to Campowerment for more than 50 deserving women. Our people love SOTO style and so do we… And to our beloved community of LA women who are so committed to self care, personal growth, playtime and deep connection, we say THANK YOU, for wrapping your arms around us, and each other, and for helping us get back on our feet after the Woolsey Fire nearly wiped us out. It takes a village, and we are so very grateful for ours…

Website: www.campowerment.com

Instagram: @campowerment and @tampowerment

Linkedin: @Tammi Leader Fuller

Twitter: @tampowerment

Facebook: @Tammi Leader Fuller

Youtube: @Campowerment

Image Credits

Photo Courtesy of Juliet Rose Productions

Life and Work with Tammi Leader Fuller – Voyage LA Magazine

Today we’d like to introduce you to Tammi Leader Fuller. She and her team share her story with us below.

Please kick things off for us with some background on Tammi’s story.

Tammi is an Emmy Award-winning TV Producer who walked out of the control room and into the woods in 2013 to create Campowerment… a life-altering, Expert-led, summer camp inspired, purpose-driven retreat experience that creates space for people and companies to realize their full potential, all wrapped around the power of playtime. Campowerment was created to help people disconnect and reconnect to themselves and a community of people focused on living life bigger and better.

Six years, 23 camps and thousands of happy campers later, Campowerment has gotten shout-outs from Oprah, More and Parade Magazines, the NY and La Times, as the place where people and organizations go to get the tools they need to propel their lives forward.

What started as a weekend retreat for women has morphed into powerful, culture-shifting co-ed programs, custom curated for companies and organizations looking for ways to unite their people around a shared mission. Clients include Lululemon, Snap Inc, Nestle USA and other trailblazing businesses seeking innovative new ways to help their employees to thrive, personally and professionally.

We’re always bombarded by how great it is to pursue your passion, etc. – but we’ve spoken with enough people to know that it’s not always easy. Overall, would you say things have been easy for you?

The road has been bumpy at every turn. When you build a dream from a blank piece of paper, there is no map to follow. Just last month, as we were setting up in Malibu for 160 women to arrive at our 17th Campowerment weekend retreat up there, we were evacuated as the Woolsey fire moved in. 16 hours later, the camp we called home was decimated, taking with it every material possession Campowerment owned. That’s when our community wrapped its arms around us with love and support and promises to help us rise from the ashes. Making change happen is never easy. You just have to put your head down and do the work. It’s about believing in what you do and trusting the process, fully aware it’s all out of your control.

So, as you know, we’re impressed with Campowerment – tell our readers more, for example, what you’re most proud of and what sets you apart from others.

We build communities. And help purpose-driven people and companies find insight, connection, and new beginnings. Outside in nature. Sometimes with a shaving cream covered shower cap on their heads and war paint on their faces.

We are proud that nearly 50 percent of our clients (our happy campers) keep coming back for more, year after year. I am proud that I get to work with my 82-year-old mother and 30-year-old brilliant daughter/partner by my side. I believe one of the main ingredients in our secret sauce is the inter-generational connections made at Campowerment. Our Campower Ranger program, (our counselors for the weekend,) is made up of mostly socially conscious millennials, who bring a fresh perspective to all of us. We have never seen any place where friendships span 50-60 years and are as authentic as they come

Who have you been inspired by?

Golda and Gilda inspired me. As the first Prime Minister of Israel, in 1948, Golda Meir blazed the trail for women in politics and Gilda? She was just the hilariously funny girl who flung herself around and made people laugh, even in her final days. Both inspired me in different ways and reminded me that as a woman if you want to make stuff happen, you’ve gotta have chutzpah.

PRICING:

Campowerment women’s weekend retreats happen twice a year

Cost is $1599 and is all inclusive

Corporate retreats are customized and built around client needs. Reach out to

[email protected] for info or check out http://www.campowerment.com/groups

Contact Info:

Image Credit:

Juliet Rose Production

Getting in touch: VoyageLA is built on recommendations from the community; it’s how we uncover hidden gems, so if you know someone who deserves recognition please let us know here.

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