The Apprentice has made a major change to the show’s format in series 20 – and while viewers have clocked it, Claude Littner reckons the candidates haven’t earned the right to complain.
It’s been two decades since Lord Sugar first entered the boardroom.
Over the years, the structure has barely shifted. As Sugar once put it, it’s like football: “The rules are the same every game, but something special happens every game.”
That’s why people have quickly noticed the change, and this is what Littner had to say.
Claude Littner didn’t have many good things to say (Credit: BBC)
Claude Littner reacts to The Apprentice scrapping rewards
In previous series, the winning team would celebrate with a “treat” – from luxury meals to activity days like abseiling or indoor skydiving. Sometimes underwhelming, sometimes extravagant, but always part of the show.
Not anymore. In series 20, win or lose (unless you’re fired), everyone just heads back to the house.
Littner didn’t sugar-coat his thoughts when fans raised the issue online.
“My take on this issue is based on current performances. None of the candidates deserve a treat,” he wrote on X.
“I would send them to bed without a bedtime story or a lullaby.”
Claude isn’t a big fan of Unfinished Business (Credit: BBC)
Claude Littler calls series 20 a “fine mess”
Littner hasn’t been shy about the rest of the series either.
Replying to a viewer who branded it “rubbish”, he said he hoped “genuine talent emerges”. After episode 2, he labelled candidate Kieran McCartney “obnoxious” and added: “He has to go.”
During another task, he posted: “Another fine mess! No teamwork, expertise, common sense, or… functioning brain cells!”
He also weighed in on the revamp of You’re Fired. The studio-based spin-off, previously hosted by Tom Allen, has been replaced by Unfinished Business – a podcast-style after-show.
“Feels like a retrograde step,” Littner wrote. “Prior format was fun for the audience, invited celebs, fired candidates, and their families.”
Still, he’s urged frustrated fans to stick with it, insisting the series can be slow to get going before the real contenders rise.
The Apprentice has claimed another casualty – and the latest candidate to be fired isn’t holding back, branding their exit “unfair”.
In this week’s episode of The Apprentice, Lord Sugar challenged the teams to turn 25kg of ingredients into profit-making food concepts. One side got chicken, the other eggs, and both ran into trouble fast.
From chicken skewers pitched to a client who explicitly didn’t want skewers, to boiled eggs on sticks and pies that failed to tempt Greenwich Market punters, it was messy on both fronts.
But one team lost by a clear margin – and the sacked candidate believes Alan Sugar made a mistake.
Tanmay is the fourth candidate to get sacked (Credit: BBC)
Tanmay Hingorani says Apprentice firing was ‘unfair’
The egg team ended up in the boardroom, with Tanmay, Megan and Carrington facing Lord Sugar.
The key blunder came during negotiations with a corporate client. After Karishma opened at £27 per head, Megan unexpectedly slashed the price to £12.
“I shook the hand on £11.80 trying to salvage it,” Tanmay explained.
“I did take the bullet in the boardroom and I do think it was unfair. But you win some and you lose some and I can’t do much about it now.”
He added that, in his view, the decision could have gone either way.
“I think at the time, sitting in the boardroom, it was a lot closer and I remember in the moment thinking it could probably go either way between myself, Megan and Carrington.
“You could have even put an argument forward for Karishma and Andrea but in the boardroom, I was there, and I tried to keep composed but I do think it was unfair.”
Tanmay says Megan should have gone instead (Credit: BBC)
‘It should have been Megan’
Tanmay didn’t shy away when asked who should have been fired instead.
“Looking back, it should have been Megan,” he said.
“I don’t think there is even an argument for it to have been anyone else. Maybe Karishma or Andrea but Megan makes the most sense.”
With Tanmay gone, he becomes the fourth candidate to leave this year’s competition, following Nikki Jetha and Georgina Newton in week one, and Marcus Donkoh in week two.
Viewers who tuned into the latest episode of The Apprentice on Thursday night took to social media after noticing a change to the show’s format.
The long-running BBC series, which debuted its 20th season in January, sees 20 candidates compete for a chance to secure Lord Sugar’s £250,000 investment in their business plan, as well as his mentorship.
Viewers noticed that the winning teams have not been rewarded
Over the course of the series, the candidates are split into teams and set weekly tasks, all designed to test their skills in negotiation, sales, marketing and leadership. The losing team faces Lord Sugar and his formidable advisors Baroness Karren Brady and Tim Campbell, who have been keeping a watchful eye over the teams and making notes on their performance during the tasks. At the end of the episode, one or more of the candidates is fired.
Usually, Lord Sugar rewards the winning team with a prize, such as a spa trip. However, viewers have noticed the winning teams of the latest season have yet to be treated so far.
WATCH: Did you watch The Celebrity Apprentice Christmas Special?
What have viewers said about the latest episode?
Taking to social media, viewers questioned why the winning team hadn’t received a reward. One person wrote: “Just thinking – no reward for winning a task this series,” while another asked: “Why doesn’t the winning team get a reward anymore?”
The long-running show debuted its 20th season in January
A third viewer penned: “Wait the winning team doesn’t get a reward anymore?! #TheApprentice,” while another asked: “#TheApprentice Why aren’t the winners getting a prize experience this year?”
At the end of episode one, Lord Sugar didn’t explicitly tell the winning team that he was withdrawing their reward, but he did call their performance a “disgrace”.
Candidates compete for a chance to secure Lord Sugar’s £250,000 investment in their business plan
“Technically yes you’ve won, but I wouldn’t call this a win,” he said. “Quite frankly, it’s a total disgrace.”
Has Lord Sugar ever not awarded a winning team with a reward?
If the winning team hasn’t performed to Lord Sugar’s liking, he may choose to withdraw the reward. However, this doesn’t often happen.
One of the most notable instances took place in 2011, when Lord Sugar provided the two teams with a pallet carrying 250 pounds’ worth of wholesale goods and tasked them with reinvesting in the best-selling products.
The series continues on Thursday nights on BBC One
While the winning team made a profit of £751, Lord Sugar was still disappointed with the performance of the group, who were fined for ignoring the rules about reinvestment. Subsequently, Lord Sugar cancelled their reward, which would have been a helicopter trip to the sporting estate Goodwood and riding in vintage cars.
The Apprentice season 20 continues Thursday 12 February at 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer.
JB Gill and his teammates have been crowned winners of the Celebrity Apprentice 2025 after storming to victory with their festive creation, Gary the Penguin – so what happened in the moments before they won?
The JLS star lifted the trophy in the two-part Christmas special. He worked alongside Matt Morsia, Thomas Skinner, Sarah Hadland, Angela Scanlon and Shazia Mirza, after their biscuit massively outperformed the competition.
JB Gill and teammates Tom Skinner, Matt Morsia, Shazia Mirza, Angela Scanlon and Sarah Hadland have won The Celebrity Apprentice 2025 (Credit: BBC)
Celebrity Apprentice 2025: Pitches, biscuits and Rylan Clark
The final saw the celebrities return to the UK with their products after creating their biscuits in Lapland. JB’s team launched Gary the Penguin, while the rival group, led by Rob Rinder, unveiled a rival treat named Jolly McTrouble.
Rob’s team featured AJ Odudu, Eddie Kadi, Charlie Hedges, Kadeena Cox and Jake Wood, and both sides were put through their paces as Lord Alan Sugar scrutinised every detail.
The episode saw the candidates listen back to their completed radio jingles and watch their TV adverts, which raised more than a few eyebrows, before moving on to the most important stage of the task – sales.
The celebrities were first tasked with calling in favours from their own contacts to help promote their biscuits. They then pitched directly to major retailers including Tesco, Amazon, Boots, Ocado and ASDA.
Matt, better known to Gladiators fans as Legend, enlisted help from his Gladiators mates to boost Gary the Penguin’s pitch. While Rylan Clark was also persuaded to lend his support.
Rob’s team pulled out some big-name backing of their own. Video messages from Benedict Cumberbatch, Piers Morgan and Robbie Williams enthusiastically praising Jolly McTrouble.
With pitches complete, both teams worked the room to secure orders from as many retailers as possible. Rob’s approach caught the attention of Baroness Karren Brady as he pushed hard for sales, even referencing his late grandmother during one conversation.
Meanwhile, Thomas Skinner proved his Apprentice credentials by securing a string of strong orders for Gary the Penguin.
JB’s team were helped in their pitch by Rylan Clark and Gladiators Fire, Diamond and Bionic (Credit: BBC)
JB Gill wins as sales figures are revealed
Back in the boardroom, Lord Sugar reviewed the teams’ performances. He watched their adverts, listened to the jingles and sampled the biscuits himself. Sugar was unimpressed with Gary the Penguin’s TV advert, branding it poor. He also criticised Jolly McTrouble for lacking clear Children in Need branding on its packaging.
The final sales figures then sealed the result.
Rob’s team managed to sell Jolly McTrouble to all seven major retailers, as well as four additional buyers they contacted independently, totalling 355,500 units sold.
JB’s team also secured deals with all seven retailers, plus two more on top, achieving a huge 452,000 units sold. They clinched the win.
As the losing team digested the result, the victorious group celebrated loudly as they left the boardroom.
They chanted: “Gary the Penguin, do do do-do!”
After a visit to the Bridge Street Cafe, the losing candidates returned for a final showdown with Lord Sugar. AJ was quick to criticise Rob’s leadership, with others agreeing they lacked clear direction throughout the task.
Rob Rinder – bottom right – was fired by Lord Alan Sugar (Credit: BBC)
‘You’re fired’
AJ, Eddie and Charlie were dismissed, leaving Rob to choose Kadeena and Jake to return with him to the boardroom. Lord Sugar wasted little time in delivering his verdict.
“I don’t like wasting my time. You admit yourself that you gave your team no clear direction,” he told Rob.
“Despite the fact that you did a tremendous job of selling over 300,000 units, and I do acknowledge that, it’s with regret that you’re fired.”
Kadeena and Jake were thanked for their efforts in raising money for Children in Need and allowed to leave. It brought the festive special to a dramatic close.
The time has come for BBC viewers to journey back to the boardroom with the return of Lord Alan Sugar‘s Celebrity Apprentice. For this year’s festive special, 12 famous faces are competing to raise prize money for BBC Children in Need.
Split into two teams and told over two episodes, the celebrity candidates head to Lapland, the home of Father Christmas himself, where they are tasked with creating and marketing Christmas biscuits. But just like Santa’s elves, the celebrities have their work cut out for them as they attempt to impress Lord Sugar.
They are joined by Baroness Karren Brady and Mike Soutar, who steps in for Lord Sugar’s usual advisor Tim Campbell, who was unavailable due to scheduling conflicts.
So from TV presenters and actors to radio DJs and athletes, here’s the full list of celebrities taking part in this year’s Celebrity Apprentice Christmas Specials…
WATCH: The Celebrity Apprentice Christmas Specials Trailer
AJ is best known for hosting ITV’s Big Brother, Celebrity Big Brother and Channel 4’s Married at First Sight: Afters.
Reflecting on her experience, AJ summed it up in one word: “Magical,” she said. “Truly magical. Going to Lapland is a bucket-list experience for so many people, and I got to tick it off while being part of something that gives back. To combine that sense of fun, adventure, and teamwork with raising money for such an important charity, it doesn’t get better than that.”
The Irish presenter is known for her turn on Strictly Come Dancing in 2023, co-hosting the Get A Grip podcast with Vicky Pattison and presenting shows including The One Show and Robot Wars.
Speaking about her experience on the festive special, Angela told the BBC: “[It was] absolute chaos from beginning to end, but the most joyful chaos I have had in my life in a while, just brilliant. Honestly, I felt like I was back at school doing some sort of weird transition year project, which we were all ill-equipped for, but you know, no less committed. So yeah, brilliant. Absolutely loved it! Now go and buy our biscuit!”
Charlie is part of the BBC Radio 1 trio Rickie, Melvin and Charlie and has also presented Dance Anthems on Radio 1 Dance.
Explaining the “once in a lifetime experience”, Charlie said: “I’m so grateful to have been asked to do this for Children in Need. I cannot tell you how grateful I am. I feel blessed that I was a part of the experience and also just to have an insight into The Apprentice. As a viewer, I watch the show and it’s just mesmerising. So it was amazing to watch what goes on behind the scenes and how everyone works. And actually I think the production team needs a massive big-up because they’re some of the very best people I’ve ever worked with.”
Fresh from the jungle on I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!, Eddie is also a stand-up comedian and presenter on BBC Radio 1Xtra.
Eddie called his stint on The Celebrity Apprentice “one of the best moments of my career”, before adding: “I certainly didn’t expect the hospitality, the way we were looked after, the fun that we had. Karren, Mike and Lord Sugar were so kind. For me, it’s something I will hold dear because I made some really, really good friends out of it as well. Which is what is it is all about.”
Best known as Max Branning on EastEnders, Jake also co-hosts the boxing podcast Pound For Pound with Spencer Oliver.
“I’ve met Lord Sugar a couple of times before, so I felt at an advantage really,” said Jake. “So I wasn’t as intimidated as some of the others, I would maybe say. But of course going into that boardroom is iconic and it’s a once in a lifetime opportunity to be sat there with the whole team and to go through the full process that they actually go through on the show, and to get an insight into the reality of designing a product and the packaging and the name and the jingle in the TV advert, to do all of those things was amazing.”
Best known as one quarter of the boy band JLS, JB first found fame on The X Factor back in 2008, before the band split in 2013. Now, he enjoys life on a farm in Kent and has presented Down on the Farm (2015) and Songs of Praise (2017).
Reflecting on his approach to the festive special, JB said: “I can’t say I was scared of Lord Sugar himself, but I had no idea what to expect. His reputation precedes him. But I ultimately wanted to get the best product or complete the task in the best fashion. So it was all very much an open book, let me go in there, see what it is, do what I do best, and be myself, and then we’ll see what happens.”
Kadeena is a successful parasport athlete, having won two gold medals at the 2016 Summer Paralympics for C4-5 cycling and T38 sprint. In 2021, she braved the jungle on ITV’s I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here! and became the winner of the sixteenth series of BBC’s Celebrity MasterChef.
Speaking about when she received the news that she’d be on Celebrity Apprentice, Kadeena said she felt “predominantly excited because it was for Children in Need, which is such a massive charity and something I celebrate every year and try to be a part of that.”
She continued: “Plus, the show is amazing, it’s so well known. And honestly, a part of me just wanted to be fired by Lord Sugar. I wanted the finger pointed at me!”
Matt, who operates as Legend on the BBC’s Gladiators, is a bodybuilder and fitness coach, best known for his over-confident alter-ego on the endurance sports game show.
His trademark confidence seems to have carried over into his game plan for the boardroom, as he said: “The Apprentice is an iconic show and ultimately I knew I’d be good at it, so it felt like the perfect opportunity to showcase my entrepreneurial ability. The fact it’s for Children in Need was a huge bonus. To have a great time, win a competition and raise a lot of money for such a great cause is pretty incredible.”
TV star and barrister Rob is best known for fronting Judge Rinder, as well as co-hosting BBC’s travel show Rob and Rylan’s Grand Tour alongside Rylan Clark.
When asked why he chose to go on Celebrity Apprentice, Rob revealed: “Because normally I’m the one doing the firing or at least the sentencing. I thought it was time to sit on the other side of the table, where the worst that can happen is Lord Sugar’s withering pronouncement that ‘you’re fired,’ not ten years at Her Majesty’s pleasure.”
Miranda actress and chummy Sarah is best known for starring opposite Miranda Hart on the hit sitcom, as well as competing on Strictly in 2024 with her professional dance partner Vito Coppola.
Sarah admitted she was nervous going into the process, explaining: “At one point Tom [Skinner] said, ‘We’re all businesspeople here,’ and I thought, ‘I’m not! Please don’t ask me what business I have’. Nothing, the business of show, Lord Sugar! It’s definitely not my comfort zone, my instinct is to make things funny. I did barrel in on the first day and said, ‘Hello!’. All three of them looked at me like I was mad. Quite quickly you realise you have got to have serious answers.”
Shazia is a British comedian, actress and writer, best known for being a panellist on Channel 5’s The Wright Stuff and appearing on Channel 4’s Celebrity The Island with Bear Grylls and SAS: Who Dares Wins.
A long-time fan of the show, Shazia explained why she said yes: “Because it was for Children in Need, so it was for charity and I wanted to do that. And also I’ve watched the show for a very, very, very long time and I’ve always found it very funny. So I thought, I think this could be a really funny thing to do.”
From the Strictly ballroom to Lord Sugar’s boardroom, Tom first appeared on the civilian version of The Apprentice back in 2019, and recently appeared on Strictly Come Dancing with his professional partner Amy Dowden.
Speaking on his return, Tom said: “Look, I absolutely loved going on The Apprentice. The process, the first time I went on it back in 2019, it changed my life, completely changed my life. I got married since, I’ve got three beautiful children, and I’ve got so much to thank the show and the producers and everyone from that experience, and it’s just an honour to be able to come back and this time have a bit of fun and raise some money for Children in Need.”
The first-ever full-length series of The Celebrity Apprentice is coming to BBC One and BBC iPlayer in 2026.
Where to watch The Celebrity Apprentice Christmas Specials
The Celebrity Apprentice Christmas Specials land on BBC iPlayer and BBC One on Monday 29 and Tuesday 30 December from 9 pm.
Movie producer David Brown was arrested Wednesday on charges that he defrauded business partners out of $12 million by creating fake companies and using investor funds to pay his personal expenses.
Brown, 39, was indicted on 21 counts of wire fraud, money laundering and identity theft. Among other things, he is accused of setting up a company called Hollywood Covid Testing LLC and using it to bill productions for COVID tests that never occurred.
Prosecutors allege that Brown also swindled investors in real estate and film deals, using the money to buy a 2025 Mercedes Benz G-Wagon and a series of Teslas, a house for his mother, as well as to pay his mortgage, install a pool and a Subzero freezer, pay for private school tuition and to put $70,000 into surrogacy services.
He is also accused of diverting $970,263 in investor funds to an entity set up to make a film about Patty Hearst and her kidnapping by the Symbionese Liberation Army – a project that did not come to fruition.
Brown produced “The Fallout,” a 2021 film starring Jenna Ortega that won the grand jury award at South by Southwest. He is also listed as an executive producer on “The Apprentice,” the 2024 film about a young Donald Trump.
Last year, Brown announced the launch of the Screen Company, a production, sales and finance entity.
“I believe in the power of storytelling,” he said at the time. “Our mission is to provide reliable and flexible financing that brings extraordinary stories to life.”
Brown has been repeatedly sued by investors who accuse him of fraud. The Los Angeles Times extensively covered the allegations against him in 2023. Brown denied the allegations to the paper and said they were the result of misunderstandings.
Brown used to live in Sherman Oaks, but has since moved to South Carolina, where he was arrested Wednesday. He made an initial appearance in federal court and will later be arraigned in Los Angeles.
In addition to producing, he has worked as a unit production manager and a production accountant.
Several minutes into Donald Trump’s dark Madison Square Garden rally speech on Sunday, the former president fired up his MAGA loyalists with the signature phrase from his NBC reality series The Apprentice. “Next Tuesday, you have to stand up and you have to tell Kamala Harris that you’ve done a terrible job,” Trump declared. “Kamala, you’re fired!” The crowd’s thunderous response was yet another reminder that The Apprentice remains central to Trump’s political appeal.
For former NBC chief marketing officer John Miller, this is a source of deep shame. His department created the advertorial myth of Trump’s business prowess and promoted it to millions of Americans. The truth was that Trump went through multiple bankruptcies despite receiving hundreds of millions of dollars of his father’s money. Miller believes that without The Apprentice, Trump would never have been in a position to run for president. “He didn’t have a real company. It was basically a loose collection of LLCs. They’d been bankrupt four times and twice more when we were filming the show. The Apprentice helped him survive that,” Miller told me. “People thought he would be a good president because I made him seem like a legitimate businessman.”
The specter of a second Trump administration motivated Miller to speak out. He wrote an op-ed for US News and World Report published on October 16, titled “We Created a Monster,” that apologized for his role in turning Trump into a reality TV star. With a week to go before the election, I spoke to Miller about the 14 years he spent working with Trump on The Apprentice, why he thinks Trump is a lying racist, and what he sees as the danger of a second Trump term. The conversation has been lightly edited for clarity.
Vanity Fair: Let’s start out talking about how you marketed The Apprentice.
John Miller: Initially, we leaned into the idea that it was a show from Mark Burnett, the creator of Survivor. But when we saw some early takes, we realized Trump was going to be a big character. So we created the title sequence with the theme music of the show, which was For the Love of Money by the O’Jays. We shot the promos with Trump in his limousine, in his helicopter, in his jet, and at Trump Tower. We created the sense of an American royalty. We kept pounding that message over and over again. I called it “ruthless consistency.”
So you sold a phony image of him as a successful businessman?
Yeah. Trump made Mark Burnett rent two floors in the Trump Tower. One of the floors was used to create a false entryway into Trump Tower. So when you came out of the elevator, there was this big fancy place and a receptionist that didn’t exist. And then another part of that floor was the boardroom that was entirely created to make it look like it was a big, important boardroom. Because Trump’s real boardroom was shabby. You would never think of it as a big-time businessman’s boardroom.
Why did you decide to speak out now?
When I retired in 2022, I started writing a book called How I Ruined American Culture. And at a certain point, it was clear I wasn’t going to get the book done before the election. So it wasn’t until two weeks ago that I said, I have to get part of the story out, and if it kills the book, so be it. What if my little story could mean the difference of a tenth of a rating point in three battleground states that could win the election for Harris?
At TV market Mipcom, Ramin Setoodeh, Variety‘s co-editor-in-chief, spoke on Wednesday about how Donald Trump‘s public persona was forged by reality TV series “The Apprentice,” and how it is that “character” who is running for the U.S. presidency today.
Speaking in a session inspired by his New York Times bestseller “Apprentice in Wonderland: How Donald Trump and Mark Burnett Took America Through the Looking Glass,” Setoodeh said: “‘The Apprentice’ is an origin story for Donald Trump’s political years.”
As research for the book, Setoodeh interviewed Trump six times after his presidential term ended, as well as interviewing more than 50 key players involved in “The Apprentice.” He also drew on other conversations with Trump before he became president.
Setoodeh argued that the lessons Trump learned making the show still guide him. “Donald Trump views the world through the lens of reality TV,” Setoodeh said. “He’s a reality TV star, not a politician, and he sees the entire landscape of the White House, of the political world, essentially as a reality TV set where he can get attention, he can generate drama and he can get ratings, which is very, very important to him.”
One recurrent theme in the Trump interviews is his obsession with celebrity. Setoodeh explained that while Trump was hosting “The Apprentice,” Burnett also produced “The Contender” with Sylvester Stallone as the host. This caused Trump to become obsessively jealous to the extent that he’d tell people “Sylvester Stallone wasn’t as good at making TV” and that he “couldn’t remember his lines, couldn’t deliver the words to the prompter.”
Even after his presidency, Trump would repeatedly tell Setoodeh: “Sylvester Stallone wasn’t as good as me; Mark Burnett said I was better than Sylvester Stallone at being a reality star.” Setoodeh added: “I just think we need to let this sink in: Donald Trump has been president for four years, he’s been leader of the free world for those four years, and what he’s still fixated on was the fact that he was a better reality star than Sylvester Stallone.”
His behavior on the show also pointed to how he would behave as a politician. Setoodeh said: “There was inappropriate behavior. There were boundaries that were crossed. He got very close to some of the female contestants. He flirted with them a little bit. He said inappropriate things about them. So really, ‘The Apprentice’ is an origin story for Donald Trump’s political years, and you see how he became the president that he became through his conduct on the show.”
“The Apprentice” creator Mark Burnett and NBC honcho Jeff Zucker can take credit or blame for creating the Trump persona. “They did create this Frankenstein of Donald Trump,” Setoodeh said, observing that through his persona on the show Trump became “this folk hero in a weird way for blue collar workers.” However, the man they thought was real was “a manufactured image that was created in the editing room by Mark Burnett, and that, I think, is what is so fascinating about Donald Trump. He was created. He was a mirage that was created by reality TV.”
However, Trump’s political power ultimately is derived from the American people, Setoodeh said. “There’s this dark side in which people believe that what they saw in the show was real, and if not for Donald Trump, there probably would have been another reality star president.”
Although director Ali Abbasi and writer Gabriel Sherman are certain to put a disclaimer title card at the beginning of The Apprentice that notes creative license was taken in retelling the story of Donald Trump’s (played by Sebastian Stan) rise to power in New York during the 70s and 80s, it’s no “embellishment” that Andy Warhol and Trump orbited orbited the same circles. In fact, the two first met at Roy Cohn’s birthday party on February 20, 1981 (Cohn was turning fifty-four, and would only have five years left to live), which Warhol would mention in one of his diary entries two days later, commenting of the event, “Black tie. The Mafioso types weren’t in black tie, though… There were about 200 people. Lots of heavies. Donald Trump, Carmine DeSapio, the D’Amatos, David Mahoney, Mark Goodson, Mr. LeFrak, Gloria Swanson, Jerry Zipkin, C.Z. Guest and Alexander, Warren Avis, Rupert Murdoch and John Kluge.”
The significance of these two theoretically “divergent” types encountering one another in a Cohn-curated environment is taken the utmost advantage of by Sherman, who uses this kernel of hobnobbing history to create a scene of dialogue between Warhol and Trump in The Apprentice that allows the former to wield a riff on one of his famous aphorisms, “Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art. During the hippie era people put down the idea of business. They’d say ‘money is bad’ and ‘working is bad.’ But making money is art, and working is art—and good business is the best art.” (Trump conveniently seemed to gloss over the word “good” in good business though, even if he chose to cite the quote in 2009’s Think Like A Champion.)
On this matter, Trump can agree with someone as “liberal” as Warhol. Even if, like Cohn, Warhol’s politics (just as his sexuality) leaned more toward “a.” As in amoral and apolitical. That two so ostensibly “different” personalities could converge in a milieu with Cohn as the common denominator spoke to something about both Cohn and Warhol. In Warhol’s case, that his bottom line wasn’t just ahout making more money, but also attending any event with name-dropping potential for his diary. As for Cohn, an association with Warhol was yet another “Easter egg” about his so-called hidden sexuality. A sexuality that Trump, like so many things, chose to ignore. Or at least turn a blind eye to. After all, his friendship with Cohn was much too beneficial to let homophobia get in the way (until it finally did because of Cohn’s overt AIDS symptoms). Besides, Cohn literally made his career out of persecuting the LGBTQIA+ community during what was known as the Lavender Scare of the 1950s, a “companion piece” to the Red Scare, if you will. Of course, the irony was obvious considering Cohn’s own homosexuality. And the irony quotient was further upped because of how enthusiastic fellow homo J. Edgar Hoover was about Joseph McCarthy and Cohn’s concerted effort to expel anyone suspected of homosexuality from government.
Even after McCarthy was disgraced and the tide turned against him and his tactics, Cohn was able to rise from the ashes and become the fixer to turn to in New York when someone had legal issues. And Trump had plenty of those starting in 1973, when the Department of Justice brought a civil rights lawsuit against the Trump Organization for its discriminatory practices against Black applicants attempting to rent an apartment at various Trump properties. It is at this point in time that Sherman sets the stage for the story to commence, for it is where Donald Trump truly starts to get on the path toward becoming Donald Trump. A “persona” that fully congeals and peaks in the 1980s, when Ronald Reagan had taken control of the government and turned America into a “neoliberal paradise” (in other words, hell for most people), much to the delight of men like Trump. And even men like Warhol (who was a capitalist before he was a gay man).
Warhol and Trump’s paths would cross again amid this “new world order,” soon after meeting at Cohn’s birthday party. In fact, Trump actually stopped into The Factory to discuss more of their favorite thing: “business.” Or the art of business (clearly, Trump would later take from that Warholian sentiment in titling his first book The Art of the Deal). At the time, there was talk of Warhol furnishing paintings for the then “still in production” Trump Tower. He did, indeed, create a series of “portraits” of the building (that meta flair) to be displayed in the lobby, but, per his August 5 (the day before his birthday), 1981 diary entry, “I showed them the paintings of the Trump Tower that I’d done. I don’t know why I did so many, I did eight. In black and gray and silver which I thought would be so chic for the lobby. But it was a mistake to do so many, I think it confused them. Mr. Trump was very upset that it wasn’t color-coordinated.”
Eventually, “The Donald” side-stepping use of Warhol’s paintings in the building would yield even stronger reactions to him and his then wife, Ivana, with Warhol writing flat-out (on January 15, 1984), “I still hate the Trumps because they never bought the paintings I did of the Trump Tower.” Interestingly, his hatred of them doesn’t seem to stem from what they represent, but from what he failed to be a part of/get paid for. Though surely that wouldn’t have stopped him from attending the black-tie opening gala for Trump Tower in the fall of 1983, as The Apprentice shows him to. While Cohn is, obviously, the true Trump foil/mentor of the film, there’s no denying the pointed inclusion of Warhol, however briefly. For, lest anyone forget, Warhol single-handedly altered the perception of art into something viewed as an assembly line business—from both the artist and the consumer’s standpoint. And that odious word, “consumer,” in relation to art really didn’t start to be in vogue until Warhol made art into something designed for mass consumption.
And, unlike, say, Keith Haring, Warhol’s intent was not for the “noble purpose” of disseminating art to people from all walks of life, but to make as much profit from it as possible. The same went for Trump in terms of buying up as much real estate as possible at a time when buildings in New York were selling for peanuts. It certainly wasn’t done as a “beneficent” way to “bring prestige back” to NYC, as Trump and his cohorts wanted to position it for their own “good PR” ends. One such key early cohort being Cohn (played to perfection by Jeremy “Kendall Roy” Strong). To be sure, the crux of The Apprentice—and where it gets its name apart from Trump’s shitty 00s reality show—is the Orange One’s formative relationship with Cohn. As such, The Apprentice reiterates that every dirty trick for “success” that Trump learned, he learned from Cohn, who took him under his wing as a client when few others would have bothered. Granted, it was Cohn who requested “an audience” with Trump first at what is supposed to be Le Club, a members-only place for somebodies and social climbers—Trump was clearly in the second camp.
As for why Cohn summoned a then “Robert Redford-looking” Trump over under the pretense of congratulating him for becoming the youngest member to join the club, Sherman explains it best when he says, “There clearly was a father-son dynamic to their relationship. On another level, there was a homoerotic subtext. One of the things I found in my research is that a lot of Roy’s lovers were young, blonde, blue-eyed men who bore a striking resemblance to young Donald. I think Roy was attracted to Trump, in a way, and this movie is sort of a love story.” Needless to say, a very fucked-up love story involving a gross betrayal from the “student who has surpassed the teacher” in terms of merciless cold-bloodedness. It’s a slowly mounting callousness he’s proud of, too, telling Ivana (Maria Bakalova) during their “courtship phase” (a.k.a. he relentlessly pursues her to the point of stalking) that there are only two kinds of people in this life: killers or losers.
Britney phrased it better when she divided the two kinds of people into “the ones that entertain and the ones that observe” on “Circus.” And yes, that’s what Trump turned his life into after securing the renovation of The Commodore hotel next to Grand Central, partnering (always a loose word with Trump involved) with Hyatt’s Pritzker family to reinvent it as the Grand Hyatt. It is Cohn, of course, who is speculated to have “silently” helped Trump push this deal through, complete with his standard brand of blackmailing select politicos. And while there might be no direct evidence to support that narrative claim in The Apprentice, sometimes, a bit of deductive reasoning is all it takes for something to be believable.
The same goes for the allusion to Trump being an avid user of amphetamines throughout the 1980s, another key component in The Apprentice to comprehending his gradual mutation into a Frankenstein monster—with Cohn as his Dr. Frankenstein. Sherman’s script is essential to unfolding that arc, along with his previous experience writing about another conservative monster, Roger Ailes, which eventually became a bestselling book called The Loudest Voice in the Room: How the Brilliant, Bombastic Roger Ailes Built Fox News – and Divided a Country. Sherman came to see Ailes as “a real-life modern-day Citizen Kane figure and someone who had been so kind of corrupted and corroded by his own lust for power.” This, too, is how he sees both Cohn and Trump, but especially the latter. And, as though to “subtly” underscore that point, the set design for one of Trump’s pre-80s yuppie apartments features a poster of Citizen Kane in the living room area. Undeniably, Trump has that same ego and empire (even if said empire is built on smoke and mirrors) as Charles Foster Kane. The New York Times thought so long ago, titling a 1983 article about the “mogul,” “The Empire and Ego of Donald Trump.” In it, the eponymous subject gives the telling quote, “‘Not many sons have been able to escape their fathers,’ said Donald Trump, the president of the Trump Organization, by way of interpreting his accomplishments.”
And yet, if Cohn is to be viewed as his “surrogate father,” Trump most certainly hasn’t escaped his “daddy” at all, having adopted every tenet Cohn imparted and then some. Among those tenets (apart from “always attack, never apologize”) penned by Sherman being, “This is a nation of men, not laws,” “You create your own reality. The truth is malleable” and, not one to exempt physical appearance from his advice, “You’ve got a big ass, you need to work on that.” To that, er, end, Sherman delivers the ultimate Frankenstein scene during the film’s coda, as Trump proceeds to go under the knife for some liposuction and alopecia reduction surgery (all as “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” is eerily sung by a children’s choir at Cohn’s funeral). The “source” for confirming that Trump underwent these procedures (apart from having eyes)? Ivana’s divorce deposition. Along with her stating that Trump raped her—a scene that is harrowingly recreated in The Apprentice.
Although, in 2015, Ivana amended the statement she made (saying, “As a woman, I felt violated, as the love and tenderness, which he normally exhibited towards me, was absent. I referred to this as a ‘rape,’ but I do not want my words to be interpreted in a literal or criminal sense”), Sherman was determined to include this scene, insisting, “I couldn’t stand behind a movie that didn’t explore Trump’s misogyny. I needed the film to engage with that, and this scene is the most powerful and visceral way. Sexually assaulting somebody you love is such a transgression. Dramatically, it showed the depth to which Donald Trump had sunk at that point in the story.” Sort of like Elvis with Priscilla (who also refers to a rape in Elvis & Me). Except that Elvis actually had a talent and Trump was, more than anything, threatened by Ivana’s star eclipsing his in a way that Elvis’ never was by Priscilla.
As for Cohn, he felt threatened by Ivana long before Trump. Not just because of his romantic jealousy, but because of his fear of Trump losing half of his “hard-won” assets, thus drafting an ironclad prenup that ends up offending Ivana in The Apprentice. But not as much as Cohn himself will end up being offended by Trump’s cold shoulder as he grows wary of associating with a “known fag.” AIDS being the ultimate outing device in the 80s (just ask Rock Hudson, summarily abandoned by his “good friends,” the Reagans when his condition became too much of a “political hot potato”). Even so, Trump offers one more “act of goodwill” by inviting him for a “goodbye forever” sendoff (thinly disguised as a “birthday celebration”) at Mar-a-Lago in early 1986, which Trump had freshly purchased in 1985. It is here that Trump gifts Cohn a pair of diamond platinum cufflinks. Ivana is the one to tell him that they’re fake and that “Donald has no shame.” This little detail layers the scene with heightened tension and emotion, as Cohn suddenly grasps the gravity of what he’s created through the revelation of how effortlessly Trump not only lies, but delivers those lies with such conviction. Sherman noted of these types of absurd moments in The Apprentice, “A lot of scenes in this movie seem so crazy that you think maybe a screenwriter invented them, but there’s actually a record of them happening.”
Sherman chooses to end the film just after Cohn’s death, with Trump in his office going over “talking points” for what would become The Art of the Deal. Written by Tony Schwartz (though Trump was sure to put his name on the book), who was hired by Trump precisely because of the unfavorable article he published in New York Magazine about the “real estate titan,” Trump is depicted as someone scrambling for anything of substance to say to his “ghostwriter” as material for the manuscript. Right out the gate, his past and childhood is something he doesn’t want to delve deeply into, saying there’s nothing “to” people other than wanting to make a lot of money and be winners—no psychoanalysis required to see that. With little else to probe, Schwartz tries to draw out some of the simple steps for making a “good deal.” Trump then regurgitates the three rules for success that Cohn had taught him long ago, listing the “rules” as though he thought of them himself.
And it’s a scene that’s entirely believable as fact, what with Sherman remarking, “People who have known Trump since the 1980s told me that Donald was using both the techniques and words that Cohn taught him. That’s really when the inspiration for the movie came about, thinking about the ghost of Roy Cohn inhabiting the body of Donald Trump.” Again, Trump hasn’t escaped his “father.”
Matt Tyrnauer, director of the 2019 documentary Where’s My Roy Cohn?, already established what Sherman reemphasized by stating to NPR, “Donald Trump is Roy Cohn. He completely absorbed all of the lessons of Cohn, which were attack, always double down, accuse your accusers of what you are guilty of, and winning is everything. And Trump absorbed these lessons and has applied them in every aspect of his life and career.” The one lesson Trump didn’t seem to absorb from Cohn, however, is that the truth always—but always—catches up to you. Granted, Cohn avoided paying fully for his sins by dying before he had to. Perhaps the same will be true of his protégé.
Jeremy Strong has ignited Oscar chat with his performance in The Apprentice as Roy Cohn, Donald Trump’s mentor and lawyer during his hinterland as a property developer in Manhattan, but he’s revealed that every studio initially passed on the project.
Strong told The Times of London that the film, co-starring Sebastian Stan as Trump, did not find US distribution for months. As we’ve previously reported, after The Apprentice premiered at Cannes, and the Trump campaign widely publicized a cease-and-desist letter that threatened legal action. It labeled the film a “libelous farce,” and “direct foreign interference in America’s elections,” because some financing came from Canada and Ireland. The whole thing was a bluff, but an effective one. Potential distributors ran for cover.
Strong told The Times: “I found it profoundly disturbing and a dark harbinger of things to come. Frankly, everyone in Hollywood passed on it because they were afraid of litigation or repercussions. I don’t think Hollywood has ever been a bastion of bravery, but that was disappointing.”
The film lays out Trump’s life in the 1970s, when he took over the family property business and began his empire-building under the tutelage of Cohn.
Strong calls it a “Frankeinstein movie” saying: “They told us not to frame it like that, but let’s be honest. Cohn’s malign legacy is one of denial and that is what he passed on to Trump: this detestation of the world and a need to punish and act out with hatred.”
While Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung has denounced the film in a statement, the former president, at least based on reports, hasn’t made any new legal threats against the film nor has he been issuing headline-making statements about it on Truth Social or at his rallies.
When asked about the possibility of future Trump threats at The Apprentice‘s New York premiere, just a little over a block away from Trump Tower, director Ali Abbasi stood by his movie and doubted Trump’s team would sue.
“I doubt they have the balls [to come after the film],” Abbasi told The Hollywood Reporter. “I don’t think so, because they know we’re right. They know there’s nothing to be sued about. They know that things are accurate and double and triple, quadruple checked journalistically and legally. There’s nothing there, you know.”
Still he was defiant about future threats: “I mean, bring it on. That’s what I tell them.”
The screening, at New York’s DGA Theater, was attended by stars Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong and Maria Bakalova; writer Gabriel Sherman; producer Daniel Bekerman; and executive producer Amy Baer and even former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who walked the red carpet and spoke to media outlets.
Cohen, who told THR that he was invited by longtime acquaintance Sherman and said he was curious to see the film, offered some insight into how Trump might publicly react to the movie.
“It all depends on … what the reviews are. If the reviews are scathing to him, he will respond to it,” Cohen told THR. “You know, what he doesn’t want to do is fuel the conversation about something that he didn’t want to be released. The more he talks about it, the more he exposes the movie, and the more people obviously will want to see it. As Donald will always tell you, sometimes bad press is good press.”
The film focuses on the relationship between Trump (Stan) and New York power broker Roy Cohn (Strong), when Trump was an up-and-coming real estate mogul in the 1970s and ’80s, showing how Cohn shaped Trump into the man he is today.
And Cohen said he “absolutely” saw the effects of Cohn’s influence during his time working for Trump.
“The loyalty that you were required to provide was something you don’t see in other companies,” Cohen said. “It was demanded, and I gave it. And that was something that I do know that Roy Cohn told him.”
Though the film is being released less than a month before the 2024 election, the filmmakers have maintained that it’s not a political hit piece and instead offers a nuanced portrayal of the Republican presidential candidate’s early career.
But when asked what they wanted voters to take away from the film, Bekerman said he hoped it would give them a “new perspective.”
“I really hope that this movie does offer a new perspective on things that people have sort of shut off their brains on because they’ve formed a very hard opinion one way or the other, and they sort of stop really looking at it. I think this movie does offer a new way to look at it, and the way really is a humanistic storytelling lens that we look at this, these characters through,” he told THR. “By connecting with the characters as human beings, as Ali directed them, as the actors gave the characters the respect they deserved and didn’t just portray them as cartoons like they’re, frankly, mostly portrayed in most most of the media these days, there is a new potential for a new perspective, and I think that’s valuable any time, especially now.”
Abbasi meanwhile, urged people to “see it with an open mind.”
And while highlighting the entertainment factor of the film more than its influence on the election, he insisted this was the right time for it.
“I think it’s a ride. I think it’s an experience. I think it’s actually quite entertaining. I love the soundtrack. There are amazing performances. So not everything is about Donald Trump for or against,” he said. “It comes before the elections, because this is the biggest event. And I would be crazy if I said, ‘Oh, I have the possibility of doing it and not do it,’ because this is very much about the character who’s running for president. And I’m not going to tell you how to vote. But if you are wondering what kind of character he is, if you are wondering how he got to the place he is, we have some answers for you.”
Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong star in “The Apprentice,” a film about Donald Trump’s early years and his mentor Roy Cohn. After a controversial Cannes premiere and threats of legal action from the Trump campaign, the movie is set for release just weeks before the election.
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“Ooh, dark MAGA,” Jon Stewart quipped on Monday’s episode of The Daily Show. “I didn’t know it came in flavors! I wonder if for the holidays they’ll come out with peppermint bark MAGA. Or pumpkin spice MAGA.” After taking some swipes at Musk’s overly enthusiastic presence at the rally—“He’s acting like a guy who won a radio contest”—the late-night host grew serious about the tech billionaire’s assertion that Democrats are the anti-free speech party.
“Now, you might think one of the world’s richest men controlling one of the world’s most influential platforms could be a recipe for what some may consider election interference,” Stewart began. “You stupid, stupid people. You disgust me. Election interference is what Mark Zuckerberg did.” Stewart then reminded viewers that Trump accused the Facebook founder of election interference back in 2016 and 2020, although the ex-president seemingly has no issue this election cycle with Musk offering his followers money to register swing voters.
Stewart also noted that Trump’s campaign has called the new movie The Apprentice, a fictionalized depiction of Trump’s early rise to power, “election interference by Hollywood elites,” and that Trump has threatened legal action over its release. Said Stewart, “Oh, come on! That’s election interference? Maybe it’s election interference, but you gotta be a little bit flattered that you’re being played by Sebastian Stan.”
The segment then cut to a clip of Musk claiming that Democrats are coming after free speech. “Elon, were you not watching the rest of the show?” Stewart asked. “A movie Trump doesn’t like is going to get sued. A tech mogul he doesn’t like, he wants to put in prison. It’s not free speech if only Trump’s admirers get to do it without consequence.”
Stewart’s commentary turned even more contentious after he played a clip of Musk at the rally. “At least the Constitution remains intact and is there to ensure that we have the First Amendment,” Musk said. “The Second Amendment is there to ensure that we have the First Amendment.”
“Guns don’t protect our free speech!” Stewart replied. “Our free speech is protected by the consent of the governed, laid out through the Constitution. It’s not based on the threat of violence. It’s based on elections, organizing referendums, a judicial system. Our social contract offers many, many avenues to remedy these issues, and allows sides to be heard and adjudicated. Guns, from what I can tell, seem to mostly protect the speech of the people holding the gun.”
Stewart didn’t stop there. Musk’s words, he said, are “a tool of intimidation, and one that I think is actually being irresponsibly and recklessly invoked. Because some people in your crowd thought they might have been shadow-banned by Facebook. I mean, for God’s sake: you guys are in Butler, Pennsylvania. The whole reason you’re there is because some fucking asshole with an AR-15 tried to permanently litigate his vision of this country’s free speech. That’s why you’re there. The whole point of a society is, guns don’t decide it. I would prefer at this moment not to trade in a government that offers me many remedies for my concerns, legitimate or illegitimate, for a situation where my rights are determined by how many militia members agree with me.”
Sebastian Stan worked hard to keep Donald Trump out of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The actor said this week he struggled to drop mannerisms he learned while playing the former president in The Apprentice when he arrived on set of the MCU’s Thunderbolts.
Stan plays Trump in Ali Abbasi’s The Apprentice, set for release Oct. 11. The Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney called the performance “excellent,” saying the actor goes “beyond impersonation to capture the essence” of Trump.
In Thunderbolts, set for release in May 2025, Stan will reprise his role as Bucky Barnes, The Winter Soldier.
“I went off to Marvel after [The Apprentice],” Stan said in an interview with British GQ. “And we were doing scenes, and I would do something, a thing or two, and be like, ‘Fuck! This is still living somewhere.’”
Stan also shared his routine for gaining weight on The Apprentice: drinking Coca-Colas and eating lots of peanut butter and jam sandwiches. The result worked for getting into character as a young Donald Trump, but made the transformation back into superhero for Thunderbolts rather challenging. Plus, filming for both movies was affected by the writers and actors strikes, which meant Stan went periods of gaining and losing weight only for filming schedules to be postponed or changed.
“I’m fuckin’ 41,” Stan said of the back-and-forth. “I just worked pretty hard to get in shape here!”
Ali Abbasi, the director of the controversial Donald Trump biopic “The Apprentice,” has checked himself into the Trump International Hotel & Tower for the film’s New York City premiere.
“I feel like this is Trump International, and I’m International, and I did a Trump movie. So I think this is a marriage made in heaven,” the Iranian-Danish filmmaker said with a laugh Monday afternoon during a Zoom video call from his hotel room. “Also, I was curious. I wanted to sort of experience the Trump luxury, but it’s not. It’s not as luxurious as you would think.”
Abbasi gives a quick tour of the room. He points to a basic white floor lamp. “It’s not really a Trump lamp,” he said. “It’s very basic. The floor is not super clean. The outlets are a bit dirty. This is not very impressive for an executive suite. By my education, I’m an architect and this is not the kind of thing you expect from Trump.”
Abbasi realizes that his hotel stay could be viewed as a publicity stunt more than anything else. “I’m thinking it should be whatever helps the movie,” he said. “If I need to scale up the building, I’ll do it. But I have to say there is this strange pleasure of sitting under his name and writing on a piece of paper with his name on it.”
Variety has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.
The film, starring Sebastian Stan as the former president during his younger years as a real estate developer in New York City and Maria Bakalova as his first wife Ivanka, premiered at the Cannes film festival in May. At the same time, the Trump campaign threatened legal action over the movie with a spokesman blasting the film as “garbage” and “fiction.”
Trump lawyers also sent a cease and desist letter warning the team behind the movie not to pursue a distribution deal.
“The Apprentice” includes depictions of Trump popping amphetamine pills, getting liposuction, having surgery to remove his bald spot and a scene in which he violently throws Ivanka to the ground and proceeds to have nonconsensual sex with her.
Abbasi has maintained that he’d welcome the chance to screen the movie for Trump as well as talk to him about the project. “I feel like if I was in a fight with Sid Vicious, I wouldn’t want to go and talk to his lawyers,” Abbasi said. “I would want to go and throw a cake in his face because it’s punk rock. I want to answer punk rock with punk rock. I don’t want to go down the boring way.”
Abbasi said he has not extended an invitation to the premiere to Trump or his children.
The film’s New York premiere takes place Oct. 8. Along with Abbasi, Stan, and Bakalova, Jeremy Strong, who plays Trump mentor Roy Cohn, is expected to be in attendance.
CHARLOTTE, NC — In a statement released by Patrick Yoes, National President of the Fraternal Order of Police, the FOP membership voted to endorse Donald J. Trump for President of the United States.
“Public safety and border security will be important issues in the last months of this campaign,” Yoes said. “Our members carefully considered the positions of the candidates on the issues and there was no doubt—zero doubt—as to who they want as our President for the next four years: Donald J. Trump.”
As Trump took the stage at the Hilton Charlotte University Place hotel in Charlotte, NC to accept the endorsement, he was greeted by hugs from the local FOP members who shared the stage with him, and loud cheers from the assembled audience who began chanting his name.
“As your president, I will always back the blue,” Trump began. The cheers and ovations continued as Trump promised that unlike ‘Comrade Kamala’, referring to Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee for president, he would never advocate for defunding the police.
“We have to gain back the power and respect that they deserve,” Trump said, referring to the law enforcement community, adding that he would give them the all the authority they need to “get rid of crime.”
“America’s cities and towns and suburbs are under siege,” Trump continued, at which point the former President began to attack Harris’ record on crime.
“Kamala Harris and the communist left are responsible for crime, misery and death. She is a threat to democracy.”
Photo by Carla Peay/The Atlanta Voice
During his speech, Trump touched on a myriad of issues, including local crime, homelessness, illegal immigration, police funding, gang infiltration and drug trafficking. He blamed Harris, along with the entire Biden administration, for all of the above. Using his trademark phrase from the television show “The Apprentice”, Trump drew the loudest ovation of the day by saying “Kamala, you’re fired.”
“Mothers can’t take their kids to the park,” Trump continued. “There are mobs of criminals who have absolutely no fear of punishment. You can’t even go to a pharmacy without everything being locked up.” He then gave an example of how criminals are now walking into stores with calculators to determine how much they could steal – presumably to determine the difference between a misdemeanor and a felony.
Addressing the problem of illegal immigration, Trump attacked Harris’ record as attorney general in California and her effectiveness, or lack thereof, as America’s “Border Czar.”
“With her in charge, we have become a nation of fear and freeloading,” Trump stated. “We are being conquered. When I am president, we will take back every inch of land taken over by migrants.”
Trump also promised to bring ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents to handle the illegal immigration problem, begin mass deportation efforts, and impose mandatory minimum sentences for crimes committed by gangs.
“I will stop the invasion,” Trump continued, returning to his law and order theme. “I will seal the border. I will impose the death penalty for crimes committed by drug cartels and institute a Naval blockade.”
As he closed out his speech, he promised a room full of FOP members that while he might overfund the police, but he would never defund the police.
“When I am president, I will make America safe again.”
If the presidential campaign stirs your appetite for still more political noise, here’s a quick solution: Catch the new biopics of Donald Trump or Ronald Reagan. Trump calls the movie about him “a hit job”; Reagan likely would find his biopic a sleeper. (Oops, wrong kind).
Is there an audience for political movies? Perhaps it’s no coincidence that two movie stars known as policy activists instead have created caper films for the popcorn crowd, or the streaming subset.
George Clooney glibly glides through Wolfs, co-starring Brad Pitt, while Matt Damon ambles through the chaos of The Instigators, co-starring Casey Affleck. The paydays are formidable, but their Tomatoes will whither on the vine.
But then political movies always have had a troubled history in terms of impact and accuracy: One helped obliterate an entire studio regime, another triggered a bitter creative feud. But none became a major audience hit.
Are stars today wary of movie polemics? Warren Beatty enjoyed stirring outrage with Bulworth (1998), but Robert Redford, cast as a dedicated young liberal in The Candidate (1972), failed to find an audience.
The resolute Redford soon won acclaim for All the President’s Men (1976), but his legendary scenarist, William Goldman, was so angry with the actor-producer that they never spoke again. Redford had made major changes in the script without telling Goldman (co-star Dustin Hoffman stayed out of the fight).
Beatty and director Alan Pakula triggered a corporate war within Paramount when their 1974 political thriller The Parallax View seemingly was shunted aside by the studio. Robert Evans, the studio chief, had points and producer credit in Chinatown. But since the Roman Polanski thriller opened within a week of Parallax, Beatty and Pakula argued that Chinatown had been awarded a much richer ad budget.
The conflict expanded with the revelation that Frank Yablans, then Paramount’s president, shared in Evans’ Chinatown profits. Barry Diller suddenly emerged as Paramount’s new studio chief as Evans and Yablans were ushered out.
By any standard, Parallax and President’s Men, both directed by Pakula, were vastly more nuanced and sophisticated than the two biopics opening this week.
It’s doubtful if the tame, if not worshipful, biopic about Reagan will stir similar controversy. Working under layers of makeup, Dennis Quaid depicts the late president as a folksy if fervent anti-communist crusader who faces down campus protesters before taking on the Kremlin.
I covered Reagan’s early political career during my time as a New York Times reporter and found him both thoughtful and warm-spirited.
Still, Reagan the movie distorts its protagonist’s policies, starting with his reign as president of the Screen Actors Guild, continuing into his confusion about both the Black List and the threat of AIDS. Reagan himself might have been uncomfortable watching Jon Voight, a Trump supporter, cast as the narrator. He plays an aged communist spy.
“Let Ronnie be Ronnie,” Penelope Ann Miller’s Nancy Reagan repeatedly admonishes her husband’s advisers during the biopic, and I suspect that would have applied to the film. “Ronnie” might have agreed, had he been coerced into seeing the film. When Reagan was in a dark mood, his advisers would urge him to see The Sound of Music. He once confided to me that he didn’t like that movie either.
Mr. McMahon and Donald Trump’s Battle of the Billionaires Contract Signing via WWE, YouTube
Directed by Ali Abbasi and starring Marvel actor Sebastian Stan in the titular role, The Apprentice is a Donald Trump biopic that sees the former president’s early days in real estate under Roy Cohn’s wing who, according to the film’s synopsis, teaches the young businessman “how to amass wealth and power through deception, intimidation and media manipulation.”
Donald Trump holds Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller) in high esteem in Zoolander (2001), Paramount Pictures
Because it’s an election year and Left-leaning Hollywood folks are desperate to prevent Trump from being reelected, The Apprentice was unsurprisingly going to be praised as the greatest thing since sliced bread — that is, of course, according to mainstream media critics who have been salivating over the film following it’s premiere at the ultra-woke Cannes Film Festival.
Not quite the surprise, given that The Apprentice Director Ali Abbasi used the film’s premiere to smear the former president, declaring that the reason he set out to make the Trump biopic was because “there is no nice metaphorical way to deal with the rising wave of fascism.”
Kendall (Jeremy Strong) wakes up after a rough night in Succession Season 1 Episode 10 “Nobody Is Ever Missing” (2018), HBO
Mainstream critics have come to the film’s aid. Unsurprisingly, The Apprentice has a 74% on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, with 31 reviews — 23 of which giving the film a fresh score and 8 of them labelling it as rotten. Similarly, with a slightly lower score, the film has a 61/100 on Metacritic based on 18 Critic Reviews, with 11 positive (61%), 7 mixed (39%), and 0 negative reviews.
The Playlist’s Rafa Sales Ross gives the film a B+, offering praise to Sebastian Stan as a young Donald Trump, writing, “Stan plays Trump without an overreliance on the frazzled blonde wig and increasingly pronounced prosthetics. The actor is at his greatest whenever he taps into this marriage between a swollen superiority complex and paralyzing insecurity that make up the fabric of the reality TV star turned unlikely President of the United States. “
“There is, of course, a fear that a film like ‘The Apprentice,’” she would later add, before concluding, “Alas, the Trump at the center of Abbasi’s sleek satire is the same Trump already etched in the cultural consciousness — an incompetent, disloyal, criminal fool. That, one hopes, will only cater only to those already indoctrinated.”
Ed (Bill McHugh) has a business meeting with Donald Trump in Sex and the City Season 2 Episode 8 “The Man, the Myth, the Viagra” (1998), HBO
The A.V. Club’s Jason Gorber also gives the film a B+ who, after praising Stan’s performance as Trump, notes, “The voice is not the same gravelly one that so many comedians make part of their parlor tricks, but the subtle intonations and tics are absolutely present as we witness them being shaped and developed, just as Trump himself is rising within the world that he has set out to dominate.”
“Trump may be the monster that [Roy Cohn] helped craft, but despite his money and his connections, Cohn was never going to be able to grab the golden ring because of who he was, regardless of what he accomplished.”
Bringing up Vikram Gandhi’s Barack Obama biopic from 2016, Barry, Gorber then writes, “One need only look at Barry, the 2016 film about a young Barack Obama, to see just what pitfalls Abassi and his team were up against with a telling such as this.”
“While Barry plays as the rise of a future beloved figure, with any missteps more charming than egregious, the tale of Trump and Cohn is both far more intricately realized and also far more sinister in its universal tale of the nature of power, influence, and betrayal,” he concludes.
Kevin (Macaulay Culkin) ask Donald Trump for directions in Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992), 20th Century Fox
Time Out’s Phil de Semlyen gives the film 4 stars out of 5, writing, “The result is either an inspiring Secret of My Success tale of bromance, entrepreneurship and reinvention or a gruesome origin story for a capitalist goblin who sheds his few human qualities in pursuit of the mighty dollar, depending on who’s watching. A cinematic Rorschach test, it’s more likely to reaffirm your views on the man than challenge them.”
“Like Scarface with cheeseburgers, [Director Ali Abbasi] charts Trump’s path to the top paved with junk food, speed pills and deals, shady and otherwise, navigated with the ultra-aggressive, unrepentant mentality instilled in him by Cohn,” he further notes.
A Message from President Donald J. Trump via Trump White House Archived, Youtube
Looper’s Audrey Fox gives the film an 8/10, writing, “When you watch the first few minutes of “The Apprentice,” there’s almost a sense of repulsion as Sebastian Stan speaks as Trump. “Am I actually watching this? you may ask yourself.”
“The depiction of Trump plays into a sense of internal delusion — especially once he’s more successful, Stan portrays him with the supreme confidence of an idiot who thinks he’s the coolest, smartest, handsomest guy in any room,” Fox further describes.
She adds, “There are moments where Abbasi sets up these hero shots where Trump clearly thinks he looks like a movie star, but they’re purposefully just the slightest bit off, and he actually looks tremendously stupid.”
“Trump is often begrudgingly praised for his charisma, but “The Apprentice” captures how awkward his interactions with other people actually are, as though he fundamentally does not know how to be a human,” the reviewer opined.
Donald Trump meets The Boogeyman: WrestleMania 23 via WWE, YouTube
The Wrap’s Steve Pond gives the film a 75/100, writing, “The movie essentially shows Trump learning to lie, ineptly wooing his first wife, Ivana (Maria Bakalova), building the Commodore Hotel and Trump Tower, making an ill-advised foray into Atlantic City and gulping diet pills to keep himself going.”
“It’s the construction of the Trump persona, with help from the slimy advisor who has the keys to ‘winning,’ he continued, later concluding, “‘The Apprentice’ is amusing at times and disturbing at others, but it’s hard not to think that Ali Abbasi could have done something weirder, wilder and more satisfying if he’d found a way to bring in more magic and less MAGA.”
President Donald Trump: The 60 Minutes 2020 Election Interview
via 60 Minutes, YouTube
The Film Stage’s Luke Hicks gives the film a B, writing, “Much of what one might want to see depicted is depicted, in the sense that we get to be in the war room, near-Succession style, for his first major successes in the construction of the Grand Hyatt and Trump Tower in Manhattan, his Fair Housing Act lawsuit for discriminating against Black people, the deliciously childish and unconfident period that preceded that, and the painfully childish and confident period that followed and would eventually carry him into office.”
“Abbasi is interested in a much larger issue than one person, an issue many Americans tend not to recognize from the comfort of their home, the benefit of their bubble: the system that allows people like Trump and Cohn to flourish in the first place, much less be celebrated and empowered for their ‘achievements,’” he asserts.
The reviewer later adds, “Abbasi’s Trump tale makes the fragile money monster out to be a piece of plastic. But keep in mind that the most expensive plastics don’t break, no matter what you hurl at them. They just keep looking shiny and synthetic, no nerves to damage, no image to ruin.”
Donald Trump is sworn in as the 45th president of the United States on January 20th, 2017 via The Inauguration of the 45th President of the United States, Trump White House Archived, YouTube
The Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney gives the film a 7/10, writing, “Liberals will see it as a stomach-churning making-of-a-monster account while the MAGA faithful might conceivably misconstrue it as an endorsement of their guy, who has made the killer instinct his brand.”
He adds, “That’s not to say the movie’s political sympathies are unclear. But if the Trump years have taught us anything, it’s that truth is elastic and perception can be skewed to whatever angle is most expedient.”
“It might be considered a cheap shot to show Trump undergoing liposuction and a hair transplant in queasy detail at a grave moment for someone close to him. But that kind of disconnect from anyone else’s suffering is a key part of the portrait,” Rooney declares.
Before concluding, he touches on Roy Cohn and Trump’s relationship, writing, “What Abassi’s film reveals most of all is the extent to which the toxicity that’s now an inescapable part of our contemporary reality was shaped by the unholy alliance between two men half a century ago.”
Former President Donald Trump makes a ‘special announcement’ via Fox News, YouTube
AwardsWatch’s Savina Petkova gives the film a C+, writing, “The Apprentice does not care about deep psychologizations and all the better for it, since Abbasi allows enough room for sympathy and irony when giving us the slow process of character degradation.”
She adds, “Depicting Donald as someone who goes from laughing stock to reverie is a risky move, since it evokes identification from the audience, and who (as a non-Trump supporter) would like to identify with him at all?”
“However, the performances are all-round stellar and one cannot help but feel deep satisfaction when watching Trump’s tyrannical ascent—Stan’s facial acting becoming more twitchy and his lisp more assertive—as powered by Cohn’s catastrophic downfall,” the reviewer gushes.
Jon Voight sits down with former President Donald Trump (Sep 2022) via Newsmax, YouTube
The Times’ Kevin Maher gives the film a 7/10, writing, “It is difficult to overstate how nuanced Stan is here and how his portrait of Trump evolves in physical gestures and familiar mannerisms (saying “loser”) without becoming an Alec Baldwin-style caricature.”
“If there’s any problem with Stan’s iteration of Trump, especially in the early sequences, it’s that he’s almost too sympathetic, much like Josh Brolin’s gentle George W Bush in Oliver Stone’s W,” the reviewer goes on.
Maher later adds, “Sympathy for the Donald, however, only lasts so long and, as his shady business deals continue and his vanity metastasises, the formerly hollow man is consumed by his own megalomania.”
Official portrait of President Donald J. Trump, Friday, October 6, 2017. (Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead)
Financial Times’ Raphael Abraham gives the film 4 out of 5 stars, praising Sebastian Stan for his portrayal of Trump, writing, “it is Stan who steals the show, surpassing the army of Trump impressionists by subtly modulating his performance until Trump has been fully inflated into the orange puffball of infamy.”
“The Apprentice gives us a relatively safe portrait of a deeply contentious figure, one that is unsettling mostly for how little it unsettles,” he continues, before concluding, “For many, the thing least palatable about The Apprentice is how much Trump might actually like it.”
Kendall (Jeremy Strong) wakes up after a rough night in Succession Season 1 Episode 10 “Nobody Is Ever Missing” (2018), HBO
The Apprentice actor Jeremy Strong, perhaps best known for his role as Kendall Roy in HBO’s Succession series, has recently compared Donald Trump to dictators Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong as well as Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels.
Furthermore, the Succession star also stood behind mainstream media outlets such as CNN, NBC, and The New York Times, amongst others.
Kendall (Jeremy Strong) finds out Logan (Brian Cox) will not be stepping down as CEO of Waystar RoyCo in Succession Season 1 Episode 1 “Celebration” (2018), HBO
Strong’s inflammatory comments were made at the Cannes Film Festival ahead of the premiere of the Donald Trump biopic The Apprentice, where the Succession star plays the former president’s lawyer and mentor Roy Marcus Cohn.
“I deeply wish I could be there with you right now, but I am on stage in New York doing Henrik Ibsen’s play An Enemy of the People,” read The Apprentice Director Ali Abbasi on behalf of Strong.
He continued, “‘Enemy of the people’ is a phrase that has been used by Stalin, by Mao, by Goebbels, and most recently by Donald Trump, when he denounces the free press and calls CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, [and] New York Times, fake news media.”
“We’re living in a world where truth is under assault, and in America that assault on truth in many ways began in the malevolent chrysalis of Donald Trump’s apprenticeship under Roy Cohn,” he added. “Cohn was called ‘an assault specialist’ by The National Law Journal, and at this perilous moment in history we are experiencing Roy Cohn’s long, dark shadow.”
Kendall (Jeremy Strong) coerces Greg (Nicholas Braun) into snorting cocaine in Succession Season 1 Episode 8 “Prague” (2018), HBO
Continuing to quote Strong, Abbasi went on, “His legacy of lies, of outright denialism, of manipulation, [and] of flagrant disregard for truth has reached a terrible fruition. Ali Abbasi has made a monster movie, where one begets the other.”
“It’s an attempt to understand, in the words of the 11th century Persian poet Omar Khayyam, how ‘yesterday this day’s madness did prepare,’” Strong’s statement concluded.
Kendall (Jeremy Strong) breaks down in tears as he is blackmailed by Logan (Brian Cox) in Succession Season 1 Episode 10 “Nobody Is Ever Missing” (2018), HBO
Abbasi himself took a moment to smear Trump at the premiere of The Apprentice, declaring, “When we did this movie everyone said, why do you want to make a movie about Trump? If you want to tell something about the world, do it in a nice way, in a metaphorical way.”
“How about the Second World War movie? How about a First World War movie? How about an American independence movie? How about the Russian invasion movie? ” the director recalled being suggested to make into a film, adding, “The point is there is no nice metaphorical way to deal with the rising wave of fascism.”
Director Ali Abbasi makes the biggest political statement of #Cannes2024 so far during the 8-minute standing ovation for ‘The Apprentice’: ‘There is no nice metaphorical way to deal with the rising wave of fascism.’ pic.twitter.com/BGny0agRUW
Starring Marvel actor Sebastian Stan in the role of a young Donald Trump, the synopsis for The Apprentice reads, “1970s New York: determined to emerge from his powerful father’s shadow and make a name for himself in Manhattan real estate, aspiring mogul Donald J. Trump is in the earliest days of his career when he encounters the man who will become one of the most important figures in his life, political fixer Roy Cohn.”
“Seeing promise in young Donald, the influential attorney – who secured espionage convictions against Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and investigated suspected Communists alongside Senator Joseph McCarthy – teaches his new acolyte how to amass wealth and power through deception, intimidation and media manipulation. The rest is history,” the synopsis concludes.
Abbasi calling Trump a fascist pales in comparison to what the director put in the movie. According to Variety, The Apprentice features a rape scene in which Trump is seeing throwing his ex-wife Ivanka to the floor and then proceeds to have non-consensual intercourse with her.
FULL RALLY: President Donald Trump | Las Vegas, Nevada via LiveNOW From FOX, YouTube
“In the controversial scene, Ivana playfully presents a book to her husband about the merits of a female orgasm,” the outlet described. “But the interaction between the two turns dark quickly, as an uninterested Trump tells his wife that he is no longer attracted to her.”
“They argue, and then Trump throws her to the ground. An icy Trump sneers: ‘Is that your G spot? Did I find it?’” Variety concludes the description of the controversial scene.
Former President Donald Trump makes a ‘special announcement’ via Fox News, YouTube
On Monday, political advisor and Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung addressed the controversial scene in The Apprentice, threatening legal action against the filmmakers, declaring, “We will be filing a lawsuit to address the blatantly false assertions from these pretend filmmakers.”
“This garbage is pure fiction which sensationalizes lies that have been long debunked,” Cheung accused. “As with the illegal Biden Trials, this is election interference by Hollywood elites, who know that President Trump will retake the White House and beat their candidate of choice because nothing they have done has worked.”
The Apprentice Over-Lord Alan Sugar pointed his finger again tonight, firing the latest failed candidate in series 18 – so who left The Apprentice tonight?
In episode 2 of the 12-parter (Thursday, February 8, 2024), Big Al tasked the remaining 17 entrepreneurs to manufacture miniature cheesecakes to sell to the public and to a corporate client.
With aides Karren Brady and Tim Campbell watching on with a critical eye and a raised eyebrow, the teams – split into male and female at this stage – headed to the kitchen to create a sweet treat… And while both teams made mistakes, it was the boys who lost one of their own in the boardroom.
So who got fired and why? Here’s everything you need to know!
***Warning: spoilers from The Apprentice episode 2 ahead***
Lord Alan Sugar pulls the trigger on another candidate this week (Credit: MGM/Warner Bros/James Gourley)
What happened in The Apprentice series 18 episode 2?
In episode 2 of The Apprentice series 18, the candidates received a brutal 4am call from one of Lord Sugar’s minions telling them to meet at the Royal Exchange, London.
Once there, Lord Sugar informed them their task was to manufacture miniature cheesecakes to sell to the public and to a corporate client. Of course, as per usual, the team with the most profit at the end would win.
The teams had two days to design and produce one cheesecake for their corporate client, and another for the general public. The girls seemed reluctant to step forward as team lader, with Sam Saadet declaring: “I have zero experience of food.” Eh? What do you eat then?
Meanwhile, Maura Rath claimed to have “made cheesecakes” before. However, it was Foluso Falade who stepped up as team leader for the girls due to her “attention to detail”.
They decide to sell their product in Greenwich market. This despite it being far away from the kitchen where the cheesecakes would be produced. But, in the end, this didn’t hinder them.
The team appointed Rachel Woolford as sub-team leader, despite barely saying a word in episode 1. The girls decided to make a mango mojito – or mo-heet-ooo if you’re Sam – for the public. And they pitched their high end cheesecake to corporate client London Dungeon for £13.80 per cake. Kudos to Flo who wasn’t going to reduce that price for anyone, and ultimately helped the girls get the win.
Special mention to Foluso for swallowing a mouthful of truffle dust thinking it was chocolate. And to Raj brazenly asking for 50p tips on her sales. Shameless.
Who left The Apprentice tonight after Phil led the boys in the cheesecake challenge?
Meanwhile, Phil Turner was team leader for the boys, with Paul B as sub-team leader – both “pie men” and both in the food industry. Although, on paper, they should have excelled in this task, the results were shambolic.
In the kitchen, the men had no attention to detail, and the cheesecake base looked more like a crumble. Not to mention Phil’s idea to put avocado in the centre of his dragonfruit and apricot cheesecake.
Their corporate client was Innocent drinks – a company firmly focused on fruit and veg. But Paul B, proving himself to be the blundering fool we thought he was in episode 1, insisted on pushing a chocolate cheesecake. His inability to read the room was, frankly, embarrassing.
Although Phil made some mistakes with his ingredients, we couldn’t help but feel the egos in the team hindered his success. Although having priced his cheesecakes at a woefully low £6.75 per cake, it was unsurprising when the team made less profits.
His pricing structure was all over the place, and the cheesecakes “looked like something a primary school could have made”. Ouch.
Of course, when Phil looked to the camera to say he was “feeling confident about our chances of success” his fate was sealed….
Who left The Apprentice tonight? Lord Alan Sugar fired one of the cast of 2024 (Credit: BBC)
Who left The Apprentice tonight? Who got fired?
Ultimately, the girls smashed it.
The boys spent £422.15, sold £908, and made a profit of £485.85. Meanwhile, the girls spent £408.42, sold £1143, and made a profit of £734.58.
While the girls got to enjoy some high-end luxury desserts, the boys dragged their sorry arses to the Bridge Café. In the end, Phil decided to bring back Paul B and Asif Munaf, who Lord Sugar referred to as “an acquired taste”. Well, that’s one way of putting it!
All three men deserved to be in the boardroom at the end. Asif appeared to do nothing throughout the task, Phil priced the cheesecakes too low, while Paul insulted the corporate clients by ignoring their love of fruit and veg.
Asif boldly told Lord Sugar both Pie Men should be fired, while Phil laid the blame at Paul’s feet, and Paul blamed Asif.
Paul Bowen was fired at the end of episode 2 of The Apprentice (Credit: BBC)
Lord Alan Sugar fired Paul Bowen in The Apprentice episode 2
Lord Sugar subsequently fired redhead Paul Bowen. He told him: “Paul, I admire you for admitting your mistakes, but there were simply too many mistakes and so it is with regret Paul, you’re fired.”
Paul says in the taxi: “The biggest regret is obviously banging on about chocolate but, hey, it’s time to go back and make some pies.”