Episode One
13 October 20147
Welcome back! This is
the tenth anniversary series of the Apprentice, and iPlayer called tonight’s episode
‘Ten Years of Selling’. I therefore look
forward to future episode titles such as ‘Ten years of the cringiest adverts
known to humanity’ and ‘Four Years of Smelling Woss Selling because Lord Sugar
is too belligerent to realise everyone hates it’. On that subject, did anyone see the programme
about the best bits of the past ten years?
It mainly made me nostalgic for the days of plain old Sralan, but there
was also a section that reminded us how brilliant the shopping channel task is,
which makes me hope it might finally return this year.
Before we get to that though, the return of London
Porn! The annual parade of twats with
suitcases, none of whom will get name captions if the past few series are
anything to go by! Businesscliche bingo
time! Walk the walk and talk the
talk? Check. Slightly rapey comments about being an Alpha
male who can make women do what he wants?
Check. Smashing the
competition? Check. Beards that don’t match hair colour? Check.
Sralan’s looking for someone who can bring in the big bucks; Red Rum,
not a donkey. And then there’s the usual
parade of spoilers for upcoming episodes that I have to look away from.
The candidates are waiting in the boardroom, giving it all
Blue Steel stares. One of them is
wearing a blue suit, with cream moccasins and no socks. He smugly laughs, as he knows how much of a
twatbasket he is, but also that he is likely to make “good telly”. Lord Sugar welcomes the sixteen candidates
in, and then he says he’s going to do things differently and the disembodied
hand of NotFrances sends in four more candidates. This doesn’t quite have the same response as
when they chuck in new housemates in Big Brother, seeing as none of them know
the others anyway. However, TWENTY
APPRENTI? That is a lot of names to
learn. Lord Sugar clarifies that this not
because the series is going to be longer, it’s mainly because he wants to put
the wind up them and give himself the opportunity to fire more than one
candidate a week for shits and giggles.
I have to say, the prospect of an EPIC TRIPLE FIRING is quite exciting.
He clarifies the terms of their business partnerships:
£250,000 investment, a 50/50 share of the business, he won’t do any work, the
candidate will do all the grafting. He
has their CVs (not rez-hoo-mays?) that speaks highly of them. He first picks on sassy Steven, a Canadian
who looks like he would make an excellent drag queen. Apparently he’s been some sort of social
worker (the exchange is a bit muddied but from what I could tell, he and Lord
Sugar interpret what his job is/was slightly differently) and has worked in the
arctic. Lord Sugar’s joke about him
counselling penguins doesn’t tickle Steven’s funny bone, and the lack of
toadying brings out Lord Sugar’s grump.
Steven’s business plan is some sort of care home for adults with
learning disabilities and I imagine Labour peer Lord Sugar might feel somewhat
icky about making a profit out of such a scheme, but I imagine even more that
our Helen might have feelings about this whole endeavour.
James, whose accent suggests he’s not far from my part of
the world (Chesterfield according to the website) is marked out as a ‘cheeky
chappie’ whilst Colombian lawyer Felipe doesn’t look at all how you might
imagine a ‘Colombian lawyer Felipe’ to look.
Also, I looked at their bios and either they are all giving their
showbiz ages like a bunch of Paloma Faiths and Florence Welches, or BIZNESS
really is a cruel, cruel world that ages you prematurely. Felipe used to advise Arsenal FC and Lord
Sugar gives him a bit of side-eye that goes slightly beyond London football
club banter. Scott’s CV bullshit has him
describing himself as a cross between Gandhi and the Wolf of Wall Street which
receives the WTF response you might expect.
Over with the women, Ella Jade has a business idea about making documentaries ‘to benefit the greater good’. LOL Ella Jade I watched like 200 documentaries when I did my PhD and about 95% are there for reasons of ‘sensationalism’ or ‘entertainment’, which I suppose is kind of supporting the greater good in that you give people something to laugh at, but in a much less open manner than this show. She has about 100 animals, but 80 of them are sheep, which I presume means she has some kind of farm or smallholding and so that number is less like a Channel 4 intervention show and more like a fairly normal lifestyle? Sarah’s CV tells us she can sell snow to the Eskimos and she corrects Lord Sugar’s poor comprehension skills: ‘Ice actually’.
The other people do not get to have a name nor a business
plan. Lord Sugar says he’s seen the ‘headlines’
of their business plans and not the detail – presumably to counter all the
carping on the Twitters come interview week when the rotties pick apart plans
he should have scrutinised already. He
announces the first task – they’re going to sell all the things previous
Apprenti have sold in the first week selling task. Aww, I’m feeling nostalgic already for Jo
Cameron running round like a loon, that time all the women randomly tried to
snog people and… all the other times.
PMs are decided in the boardroom – the men suggest to get
the salespeople selling and put a manager in the PM role. Several of them say they’re good at selling
and Felipe offers to PM. Over with the
women, they ask who the person was that ‘Sralan’ said could sell Ice to the
Eskimos. Sarah (who looks like what
would happen if you put Katie Hopkins and Leah Totton in a blender and then
watered down the result so much you had a homeopathy level of the original
essence) says it was her and she’s happy to PM.
They’re sent off with a couple of days to complete the selling.
In the taxis, a few of the candidates introduce themselves
to each other, and to us. Still no name
captions yet. Robert (he of the ginger
beard and not-ginger hair) ‘couldn’t give a shit’ that people look at him
because he’s 6’7” and wears stupid coloured clothes. He’s a ‘global sports nutrition’ marketing
manager. Nurun is also a marketing
manager, with three small businesses. We
don’t yet learn what the others do nor most of their names.
Sarah (a former PA and hypnotherapist - which reads as the
description of a horror movie psycho-bitch character) says she has a good
feeling they will win, because most people prefer to buy from females because
they’re nicer to look at. She then wants
all the women to dress provocatively and use sex to gain sales, much to the
disgust of her team-mates. Well, if you’re
going to have a retro-themed task, you might as well relive some old strategies. I look forward immensely to the returns of
previous winning tactics such as voluminous hair, knees up Muvva Brown and SANDALWOOD.
The candidates walk around Apprentice Mansions and Robert is
disgusted at the lack of shower curtain.
Time for everyone’s favourite part now, the team
naming! In the men’s team, Robert
suggests Dynamic; some Aussie or Kiwi nobody whom we haven’t met (I think this
is Mark Wright but not that one) thinks Viper is a good team name (LOLZ); Daniel suggests Summit,
because they’ve risen to the top.
Someone else (Sanjay maybe? IDK
this show isn’t helping me out any) points out it sounds like sommat, so they’re
basically just calling themselves ‘something’ which is about as honest as team
names on this show go. Daniel snarks that nobody’s ever called a business that
before. Except these people. And these ones. And these ones. Sanjay-or-whoever says there’s a
reason for that, but they settle on the name anyway. Daniel (who runs pub quizzes, or summit) says
that he’s been listened to and that’s how it’ll stay, and there’s no I in team,
but there are five in individual brilliance.
Oh apprenti bullshit, how I have I missed thee.
Nurun suggests, as it’s the tenth year, a decade, they go
for Decadence. (Other options you could
have chosen: TENtative; Design of a Decade; TENa Lady; Wining Women).
The others seem to like it but then they wonder what it means. Ella Jade says it might be a bit OTT. Chippy Mackem Katie suggest Grafters (LOL like that would ever be a team name on this show), but
Sarah prefers Decadence and that’s what they go with.
Early morning and Felipe receives a call from NotFrances
saying the cars will be with them in twenty minutes for them to meet Lord Sugar
at Leadenhall Market.
Parade of flesh time: Mostly fairly coy, except for Sarah
(towel) and James (bare-chest). Sarah
tries to vet the other women’s outfits.
Someone (Pamela?) manages to find time to use curling tongs even with a
twenty minute deadline, which is either a) some organisation b) some misleading
editing or c) some ace hair magic skillz.
She tells Sarah they need to think more about a strategy. Sarah tells her to bring some nice make-up
anyway. Pamela (?) isn’t sure if she’s
serious or not. The products the Apprenti
get to sell include flowers, floating fish, T-shirts, coffee, fruit and veg,
cleaning equipment and sausages.
Steven tells the men to get as much value out of each
product as possible and one man suggests they get the T-shirts printed.
In a Pizza Express nearby (other chains are available),
Sarah suggests they cut up the lemons to try and get more sales out of
them. None of the other women can see
the logic in slicing them not want to.
Bianca suggests printing the T-shirts and Sarah keeps trying to get them
to chop the lemons, which no-one is buying.
The men say that hot dogs will get them a high profit and
Rob suggests gourmet hot dogs to sell to Shoreditch hipster twats (sorry the ‘East
London cool guy’) like himself. They split
into two sub-teams and Steve snipes that he’s been given the wrong task to
do. Chiles (Chiles!) is nominated as
sub-team PM.
The women bicker about their strategy and they confuse Sarah
OMG so she decides to divide them down the middle of the table because she can’t
tell who are the best sellers. The women
are all ‘we can tell you’ but then, you trust what an Apprentice candidate
tells you about as much as you trust Nick Clegg to keep his promises (/biting
political satire) so splitting down the middle is probably as good a strategy
as any. Bianca’s job title, by the way,
is the delicious sounding ‘owner, personal branding company’. I mean that could just mean she has a
Facebook page, couldn’t it? Apprentice
jobs <3>3>
Cue fun montages of people running around with wheelbarrows
and huge Perspex boxes and lots of lovely London porn! The men go to an organic supermarket to buy
things to make their sausages special (including, er, Edam). Now, I don’t think the gourmet hot dog idea
was a bad one, per se, but they should really just have bought their
ingredients as cheaply as possible rather than going for niche products. And in the revivalist spirit of this task, I
just wish they’d gone to Makro.
The girls, with a sub-team led by Roisin, go to a T-shirt
designer and get a T-shirt design with #London on it, claiming they’d buy it.
#nope. The other sub-team, led by Sarah,
are selling coffee (for £3!) and flowers, and Sarah commits the cardinal sin of
calling espresso ‘expresso’. Her teamask
if she’s going to be making coffee herself and she says no, she’s the manager,
so she’ll talk to the customers thanks all the same. The other team ring from the printers and say
Sarah’s sub-team have run off with all the seed money. Sarah takes responsibility, but instead of
travelling over to hand the cash over (or, you know, using some sort of bank
transfer process or paying for the T-shirts with a card like this is the
twenty-first century or whatever), the T-shirt sub team come back.
Over with the men, and they’re taking so long buying
ingredients that, Karren snarks, they’re not only going to miss the lunch
trade, they’re missing the dinner trade.
Well yes, Karren, what with lunch and dinner being the same meal and all
(/silently judging anyone who calls tea ‘dinner’). The Sugar’s
profits you’re wasting! They go to the
printers and there’s a comedy montage of silence as none of them can think of
anything to get printed.
The women run around selling potatoes to cafes and chippies. Back to the men and they’re still struggling
to come up with t-shirt ideas.
Eventually they come up with a slogan even worse than #London: ‘Buy this
T-shirt’. Steven suggests they go to a
mashed potato shop and sell the spuds, but Chiles says they should sell the
balloons instead. I’m not sure, given
why there are five of them, they couldn’t do both, but such is the way of the apprenti. The other male sub-team are trying to sell
hot dogs. Daniel’s strategy is to shout
at people aggressively whilst dressed as a hot dog. He sells four ‘Mexicans’ which appear to have
‘houmous guacamole’ on them and little else.
I love houmous. I love
guacamole. I never want to try them
mashed together. Or on a hot dog. BLEE.
Chiles’ subteam negotiate a deal for their fish balloons
after some very awkward fumbling whereby James attempts to charge too little
and the others talk over him because he’s Northern and doesn’t understand
London with its funny overpriced ways.
Back at the coffee cart, the women are still bickering and Sarah is
still being all ‘I am your boss’ (Rory/Tre hatemance neva4get). At this rate I can see the women unionising
and forming an allegiance against fatcat managers.
Back with the men, Karren bitches that Scott has done
NOTHING. But he’s done so little that we’ve
barely seen him, so he isn’t going to get fired.
In the cabs, the women want to sell a ‘high-ticket’ item,
like there were any of those and the men debate whether to go for T-shirts or
cleaning materials. Chiles’ subteam
worry they won’t have time to get the T-shirts, but Felipe asks them to get
them. Chiles says they won’t and he and
Steve have a fight about it where Chiles actually gives Steve the ‘talk to the
hand’ gesture and the other men tell Steve not to throw Chiles under the bus.
Sarah’s subteam are at the zoo where they are trying to flog
what the editors make us believe are a couple of buckets and a few mops and
sponges for £250. The zoo people ask
where they got that price point from.
Sarah says it’s a bargain and she’s knocked it down from £300. The zoo people ask if the products are
environmentally friendly. Sarah says she
thinks so, but they are plastic so she wouldn’t want to see them near the
penguins. Shame-faced, they slope off.
The other women, having done nothing but hope Sarah is hoist by her own
petard, whine that it was a bit silly to charge so much. I weep for the days of KGrimes making
children cry at the zoo in order to peddle overpriced shit.
At Covent Garden market, the men try to flog flowers to a
bunch of women giving them withering looks, whilst Chiles’ sub-team clean some
windows in order to flog the cleaning equipment.
Roisin’s team go back to the printers and ask the printer to
consider buying them. He says ‘no, I’ll
have them for years.’ He eventually
agrees to buy them for £50 because they’ll ‘never sell them anywhere else’. They unconvincingly try to claim they’d have
sold them for a tenner each but don’t seem too keen to take them away
themselves, presumably meaning neither team actually had enough time to print
and flog T-shirts, which is interesting in the light of what… happens. Ella
Jade convinces him to buy the hangers for an extra £10. Last minute fruit and veg selling sees James
call Maris Pipers Paris Mipers and try to sell their 100 kilos for £150, which
he’s told is way over the odds from the chef who wants to pay £20. The women also pluck prices out of the air in
trying to flog lemons and spuds. Steve
gets all romantic about a potato to try and sell them, but Mark seals the deal
by offering to chuck in the wheelbarrow for £75. The women also do a deal and squeal and then
go outside and bitch about Sarah some more.
Trading over!
Chiles updates Felipe with their sale of potatoes and admits
they didn’t have time to get the T-shirts.
They ask Felipe’s sub-team how they’ve done and the phone call cuts out
leaving Chiles’ subteam to conclude the others haven’t sold much.
To the boardroom! It
looks like a gaggle of children entering assembly when there’s so many of them –
albeit freakishly middle-aged-looking-despite-claiming-to-be-twenty-or-thirty-something
children. Lord Sugar asks the men if
Felipe was a good team leader and they concur.
He says, in the third person, ‘Felipe’s team went off to sell hot-dogs’. One of the men (Solomon, not that we know
this), looks like Paul Torrisi from series 1, or is that just me?
Nick whines that Decadence is a rubbish team name as it
implies excess and ‘moral turpitude’ which are hardly the qualities Lord Sugar
wants in his next business partner.
Still better than First Forte though.
Lord Sugar tells them to pick a different name, with a logical
meaning. Sadly, Logic has already been
used. *Crosses fingers for the revival
of Winning Women. Especially come week 8
when the teams bear no resemblance to their original configuration*. The women snipe about Sarah’s lack of
strategy and the way she split them. She
then forgets people’s names and we learn that one of the invisible women is
called Gemma. I don’t blame you for not
knowing, Sarah, it’s not like the editors can be bothered to tell us who these
people are. Lord Sugar moans that Roisin
is an accountant but didn’t check that she had money, and then they paid £150
to the printer and sold T-shirts back to him for £50 (‘£60!’ Ella Jade butts
in, like that helps). The men face palm
which is a fair response normally, but a bit rich considering their own
failings. The women say Sarah’s project
management was non-existent.
Figures time! Felipe’s
sub-team earned £365.70; Chiles’ sub-team £340 for a total of £696.70. Roisin’s sub-team earned £312 and Sarah’s sub-team
£441.50 for a total of £753.50.
DECADENCE DANCE PARTY! Lord Sugar
says the T-shirts cost the men dearly in case Felipe was unsure who to bring
back. He tells the women the first treat
on the show was a trip on the London Eye (and they got progressively worse from
thereon in) but this time they get to go in a nice pod not one of the ones with
the dirty general public. DECADENCE. They seem a bit squished up in their pod as
they toast and Bianca clichés that ‘team work makes the dream work’.
The men get dispatched to Loser café – proper loser café this
time, not one of those inferior ones they’ve had recently – Steve and I once
went on a pilgrimage there AND IT WAS CLOSED.
Chiles doomterviews that he’s the most credible candidate and shouldn’t
go home. Steven thinks people are
ganging up on him and he’ll fight his corner.
Back at the boardroom and NotFrances sends them in, where we
see that Lord Sugar’s chair has a very high back, Karren’s a medium one, and
Nick’s a very low one. Countdown
presenters, know your place. Felipe says
Steven was disruptive which is why they lost.
Steven says everything he did was for the good of the team and he said
they should have sold the T-shirts. Lord
Sugar says he wanted to hear that and there were two killer items: sausages and
T-shirts. Sausages, I can believe. When I was in year ten (a decade before The
Apprentice was ever dreamed up, sadly, never mind Apprentice Babies) we had to
run mini-businesses as part of an enterprise thing and we ran a hot dog stall at
break time which made an absolute bomb, way more than anything else people
tried, which paid for a trip to Alton Towers in the end (#obesitycrisisimaginetheheadlinesthesedays). Not sure the T-shirts were ever going to be
the best of those products in terms of generating value, but let’s not rain on
Lord Sugar’s parade, I guess. Lord Sugar
asks Felipe to clarify Steven was the problem, not the lack of sales or
T-shirts. Felipe says the men told him
they were bickering. Nick says Chiles
might have a motivation for fingering Steven.
Steven says he’s a scapegoat.
Nick snipes at Chiles that it’s handy to have a scapegoat and narrows
his eyes at him. Miaow. Lord Sugar tells Robert off for making hot
dogs fancy because all they needed was a bun.
Karren says they didn’t need to dress them up and they would have sold
more because they wouldn’t have lost an hour of selling time. Karren calls out Scott for being the worst
salesman except Felipe, but Felipe didn’t claim to be a salesman. Scott says the footfall was short but he did
contribute to sales.
Daniel is told he sold the most and asked who was
responsible for the failure and he says it has to be Steven and Steven’s all ‘hayl
no’. Lord Sugar says Steven’s an
irritant but that’s not a reason to pin the blame on him, to which Steven
responds ‘exactly’ which is never a good idea on this show, but I guess he’s
Canadian, so maybe he doesn’t know the ways of the Sugarman yet. He gets a shat ap and says the task failed
because of the hot dogs and T-shirts and says they should have sold 30 T-shirts
for £30 each. £30 each? Lord Sugar tells Felipe not to bring someone
back in for the wrong reasons, and in the first recorded instance of a PM
getting the hint in history, he doesn’t bring back Steven but chooses Robert
and Chiles.
As the men go out, Lord Sugar worries that Felipe didn’t
manage and spits that Robert is an ‘arty farty’ person, which we all know he
loves (even though he persists in giving out art tasks). Karren says Chiles didn’t contribute even £1
in sales.
They return. Felipe
says Robert was enthusiastic about the hot dogs. Robert says they went to Shoreditch which is
an ‘edgy’ area. I can’t believe there
are still hipster douchebags who don’t actually know they’re hipster doucehbags
and neither can Lord Sugar who dismisses the bladdy yuppy rubbish as well as we
might expect. The men then all shout
over each other until Lord Sugar asks Felipe if he was a good enough
manager. Felipe says he was an excellent
manager and Robert tries to shout over him again but gets shut down. Chiles’ CV says he owns two businesses and
has been a manager in various areas and has managed 200 people. He’s asked why he couldn’t manage a team of
four and he said the T-shirt decision was his choice. Felipe says he wanted the T-shirts and that
Chiles is responsible. He says Robert
shouldn’t have told him to buy the ingredients and then they all start shouting
over each other again.
Lord Sugar is worried about Felipe’s managerial skills and
says you could argue the failure lies with him for that reason, but the men also
lost lots of time for Robert’s fancy shopping.
He says he allowed Chiles in the process because he’s been there and
done that but his fundamental business errors were unforgiveable, but Felipe,
it’s regretful… that a lawyer allowed this to happen. So Felipe is fired? Nope, that’s one big old fake-out, so what
frustrates him is the hot dogs, but… fake out 2… what frustrates him more is
the T-shirts still being at the printer’s.
So Chiles is fired. To be replaced by O'Briain. Badumtish.
Lord Sugar reminds the others that he can fire multiple
people if he wants to and he thinks they should share the blame for hot dogs,
Robert for having arty farty ideas and Felipe for agreeing with them. Robert tries to plead but he gets shut down
and they’re both given the benefit of the doubt and sent back to the house. There’s no warmth shown between them and
Chiles as they leave.
Chiles exits.
Coatwatch: grey, double breasted, looks warm, scarf to keep out the
cold. Chiles cabterviews that he’s
gutted and he stands by his decisions.
Back at Apprentice Mansions, Steve says Lord Sugar was
concerned about the T-shirts. Most of
the men think Chiles should come back.
James says Felipe should be fired and Daniel says Robert was a complete
passenger on the task. Robert comes back
and they all have a freak out about whether it was just him. Felipe comes back and they all scream in
astonishment.
Tomorrow! Wearable
technology! Helen will be here to talk
you through that sure-fire recipe for failure!
2 comments:
I have had tea in Loser Cafe. They sell mugs with YOU'RE FIRED written on them.
It was actually open? Awwww, man. (Also: awesome)
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