Tag Archives: BBC1

You’re tired!

And so it was with great amusement, having seen the spoilers in the press this week leading up to it, that I sat down on Wednesday night and watched episode two of the new series of The Apprentice. Just when you thought it couldn’t actually interest you anymore with its every-series rehashed tasks, and you thought you had heard all the naff egotistical scripted lines, one of the unlucky sixteen actually had the gallantry to fall asleep in the car on the journey to their next pitch. And when she was woken up by one of her fellow contestants, she actually denied she had been asleep, even though the camera was on her and actually filming her asleep. What must be Lord Sugar making them do when the cameras are switched off, that they are now catching forty winks on the way to persuade giant retailers to buy their products?

Ah, but The Apprentice is still good fun, even if it is in its eighth year and the contestants are in danger of being horribly samey or one step away from an appearance on I’m A Celebrity. There’s a huge part of me that although I cannot actually bear 99.9% of the reality television that is served to us in this day and age (I went off Saturday night television about a decade ago; I would rather go on a self-catering holiday to the Middle East than have to endure it), I still find a great smugness from watching the ‘great, new, young and fresh business minds of Britain’ tear lumps out of each other each week as they strive ever further to the goal of Alan Sugar‘s investment. One can’t deny how cringe-worthy it gets as the series’ progress through time and you do find yourself astounded that some people, who claim to own their own businesses et al, can actually think giant online retailers would purchase a million units of their products, and get the costing so wrong! Ah, it does make for good telly though.

There have been some fantastic ‘about me’ quotes already from the candidates, and I feel that I am obliged to share my favourites with you now… (I did try and refrain but I was powerless).

Katie Wright: “‘I would call myself ‘The Blonde Assassin’. I let people underestimate me just so I can blow them out of the water.” As opposed to, ‘The Blonde Depth Charge’. Probably didn’t have the same ring.

Bilyana Apostolova: “‘I got myself from a Communist block of flats in Bulgaria to the top of a skyscraper in the heart of the City of London.” You can do that here, too: http://www.hive.co.uk/book/aa-road-atlas-europe/10531829/

Jenna Whittingham: “My personality and character is ‘once seen never forgotten’.” And then Channel 5 and Celebrity Big Brother come knocking and we have no choice.

Maria O’Connor: “If you chuck me in the deep end I’ll swim, I won’t sink.” Hmmm. Shame she sank after two episodes.

Tom Gearing: “I’m confident, charismatic and some people say I’m quite good-looking, so that adds to the bill.” Bet no one mentioned his modesty traits.

And I think at number one, this absolute cracker:

Ricky Martin (as if that weren’t enough): “I truly am the reflection of perfection.” BAFTA to the scriptwriter of that one, please! What lawks!

I cannot wait to see what more car-crash escapades there are to come as the next bright young things of British business continue to battle out their brawn for our entertainment. The bit I always get passionate about: will any of them actually have a basic, decent geographical knowledge of London for when they have the “peculiar items you must accumulate and sell on” task? Remember chaps, the West End is the EXPENSIVE area!! That’s why it’s called ‘EAST’ENDERS!!

The Apprentice is back on BBC1 on Wednesday nights at 9pm.

We are the pigs.

Karren Brady's autobiography is due next April.

Well perhaps not so much you’re hired, but more, here’s £25,000 investment in your business future.

Congratulations indeed to 16-year-old Zara Brownless, who was chosen as the winner of the second series of BBC1′s Young Apprentice last night. The final episode saw Zara go head-to-head with her rival for the title, Northern-Irish economics-student James McCullagh, as Lord Alan Sugar tested the skills of the two teenagers in a task to create a new online game for social networking sites and mobile phones. Not a fan of time-management games personally, I didn’t warm to the idea of Crazy Cabinet, the runner-up’s game, but one could definitely see the satirical mirth in it. The gameplay consisted of an amusing cartoon Prime Minister having to keep up with the demands of his occupation; answering calls and fundamentally keeping the country running, all against the clock. Similar games are already on the market, but hats off though to the young McCullagh for the idea as time-management games are just as much an addiction for gamers as anything that involves grumpy canaries hurling themselves in avenging the thievery of jade-coloured swine.

However it was the platform porcine game which won Lord Sugar’s investment for Hertfordshire’s Zara as she devised the idea of a simple chase-and-run-to-safety-game. The player lead a small, cute cartoon pig – named Porky Pete and sporting a bandage on his leg for added “aww” effect – away from a butcher brandishing a meat cleaver whilst jumping over toxic spills and all manner of other dangers. Entitled Piggy Panic, it eventually won thanks to potential possibilities of spin-off marketing such as soft toys and paid-for extra content. This I found was slightly more up my street too as I do have a weakness for games involving cute animals. Coupled with her calm determination and huge driving ambition she had shown the eight-episode series, Zara became the second young adult to impress Lord Sugar enough to gain his investment.

Sad to see the end of the series, the first one I have watched involving the young apprentices. Very much looking forward to the new series’ in 2012… and indeed, the release of Lord Sugar’s right-hand woman Karren Brady’s autobiography, Strong Woman: Ambition, Grit and a Great Pair of Heals.

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