The Apprentice (American TV series) season 1

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The Apprentice
Season 1
No. of contestants16
Winner Bill Rancic
Runner-upKwame Jackson
No. of episodes15
Release
Original network NBC
Original releaseJanuary 8 (2004-01-08) 
April 15, 2004 (2004-04-15)
Additional information
Filming datesSeptember 2003 (2003-09) 
October 2003 (2003-10), April 15, 2004 (2004-04-15)
Season chronology
Next 
Season 2

The first season of The Apprentice aired on NBC in the winter and spring of 2004. It featured 16 candidates. [1]

This season had high ratings, ranking at No. 7 in the average weekly Nielsen Rankings, with an average viewership of 20.7 million viewers each week. [2] The final episode of the season was seen by an estimated 28.05 million viewers [3] and ranked as the No. 1 show of the week, beating out a new episode of CSI . It was the most popular new show of 2004. [4]

Summary

Season one had real estate magnate Donald Trump as the show's executive producer and host.

The season started with 16 contestants, eight men and eight women from around the United States. Each had been successful in various enterprises, including real estate, restaurant management, political consulting, and sales. During the show, the contestants lived communally in a suite on the fourth floor at Trump Tower in Manhattan. Elimination took the form of one contestant being "fired" by Trump at the conclusion of each week's episode. Filming the entire season took three months.

The contestants were originally divided into two "corporations" by gender. The men chose to name their company "Versacorp", and the women chose to name their company "Protégé Corporation". [5]

Each week, Trump assigned the teams a task. Each team selected a "project manager" to lead them in the week's assigned task. The winning team received a reward, while the losing team faced a boardroom showdown with Trump and two of his associates in order to determine which team member would be fired. [5]

Elimination proceeded in two stages. In the first stage, Trump confronted the losing team and required the week's project manager to select two additional team members which the project manager believed were most responsible for the loss.

The rest of the team was dismissed (allowed to go back up to the suite, because they were safe to stay for the next round), and the project manager and the two other selected members faced a final confrontation several minutes later in which Trump fired one of the three. Trump is now well known for his catchphrase "You're fired!", and he sought to trademark the phrase in 2004. [6] George Ross and Carolyn Kepcher, executive vice presidents for the Trump Organization, observed the teams during each task, and advised Trump on who needed to be fired each episode during boardroom sessions. [7]

Candidates

Both teams, or "corporations", were divided by their gender.

CandidateBackgroundOriginal teamAgeHometownResult
Bill Rancic Cigar business ownerVersacorp32 Chicago, Illinois
Kwame JacksonInvestment managerVersacorp29 Charlotte, North Carolina
Amelia "Amy" HenryAccount managerProtégé30 Austin, Texas
Nick WarnockCopier salesmanVersacorp27 Los Angeles, California
Troy McClainMortgage brokerVersacorp32 Boise, Idaho
Katrina CampinsReal estate agentProtégé24 Coral Gables, Florida
Heidi BresslerSenior account executiveProtégé30 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth Political consultantProtégé29 Youngstown, Ohio
Ereka VetriniMarketing managerProtégé27New York, New York
Tammy LeeStockbrokerProtégé36 Seattle, Washington
Jessie ConnersMarketing firm ownerProtégé21 New Richmond, Wisconsin
Kristi FrankRestaurant ownerProtégé30 Bel Air, California
Bowie HoggAccount executiveVersacorp25 Arlington, Texas
Sam SoloveyBusiness directorVersacorp27 Chevy Chase, Maryland
Jason CurisReal estate managerVersacorp24 Detroit, Michigan
David GouldVenture capitalistVersacorp31New York, New York

Weekly results

CandidateOriginal teamWeek 5 teamWeek 7 teamWeek 9 teamWeek 11 teamFinal week teamApplication resultRecord as project manager
Bill Rancic VersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpProtégéVersacorpHired by Trump2–0 (win in weeks 6 & 10)
Kwame JacksonVersacorpProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéFired in the season finale1–2 (win in week 11, loss in weeks 4 & 9)
Amelia "Amy" HenryProtégéVersacorpProtégéVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpFired in week 131–1 (win in week 2, loss in week 11)
Nick WarnockVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpFired in week 133–0 (win in weeks 5, 9 & 12)
Troy McClainVersacorpProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéFired in week 121–3 (win in week 7, loss in weeks 1, 10 & 12)
Katrina CampinsProtégéVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpFired in week 111–1 (win in week 4, loss in week 7)
Heidi BresslerProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéFired in week 101–0 (win in week 8)
Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth ProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéFired in week 90–1 (loss in week 6)
Ereka VetriniProtégéVersacorpVersacorpFired in week 81–1 (win in week 1, loss in week 8)
Tammy LeeProtégéVersacorpVersacorpFired in week 7
Jessie ConnersProtégéProtégéFired in week 61–0 (win in week 3)
Kristi FrankProtégéProtégéFired in week 50–1 (loss in week 5)
Bowie HoggVersacorpFired in week 4
Sam SoloveyVersacorpFired in week 30–1 (loss in week 3)
Jason CurisVersacorpFired in week 20–1 (loss in week 2)
David GouldVersacorpFired in week 1

Elimination table

Elimination chart
No.Candidate1234567891011121314
1BillINININININWINBRBRINWININININHIRED
2KwameININBRLOSEININININLOSEINWINBRINFIRED
3AmyINWINININININININININLOSEINFIRED
4NickINBRINBRWINININBRWINININWINFIRED
5TroyLOSEINININININWINININLOSEINFIRED
6KatrinaINININWINININLOSEINININFIRED
7HeidiININININBRBRINWINBRFIRED
8OmarosaININININBRLOSEININFIRED
9ErekaWINININININININFIRED
10TammyININININININFIRED
11JessieININWINININFIRED
12KristiININININFIRED
13BowieININBRFIRED
14SamBRBRFIRED
15JasonINFIRED
16DavidFIRED
  The candidate was on the winning team for this task / they passed the Interviews stage.
  The candidate was on the losing team.
  The candidate was hired and won the competition.
  The candidate won as project manager on his/her team.
  The candidate lost as project manager on his/her team.
  The candidate was brought to the final boardroom.
  The candidate was fired.
  The candidate lost as project manager and was fired.

Weekly summary

Week 1: "Meet the Billionaire"

This episode's task is introduced at the New York Stock Exchange Building on Wall Street.

Week 2: "Sex, Lies and Altitude"

Week 3: "Respect"

Week 4: "Ethics Schmethics"

Week 5: "Trading Places"

Week 6: "Tit for Tat"

Week 7: "Dupe-lex"

Week 8: "Ice Escapades"

Week 9: "DNA, Heads and the Undead Kitty"

Week 10: "Wheeling and Dealing"

Week 11: "A Look Back"

Week 12: "Circus, Circus"

Week 13: "The Price is Height"

Week 14: "Down to The Wire"

Semifinal

  • Air date: April 8
  • Task: Face an interview with four of Trump's executives. Two people will be fired.
  • Fired:
    • Nick Warnock – for not gaining the respect of his peers and for lacking leadership, despite an impeccable record as project manager (3–0) and being a respected sales representative. In addition to a general agreement among the executives, all three remaining candidates unanimously recommended that Trump should fire him.
    • Amy Henry – for not earning the respect of Trump's executives. Although she had a near perfect team record (losing only one of the twelve tasks), the executives did not like her whatsoever, and one of them even remarked that "she reminded me of a stepford wife".

Final

  • Trump MonologueDog Does Not Eat Dog – Surround yourself with those loyal to you. Don't give the disloyal a second chance.
  • Finalists: Bill Rancic and Kwame Jackson
  • Teams:
    • Protégé: Kwame, Heidi, Omarosa, and Troy
    • Versacorp: Bill, Amy, Katrina, and Nick
  • Tasks:
  • Judges: Donald Trump; Carolyn Kepcher; George H. Ross
  • Notes:
    • Amy's firing marks the end of the original team Protégé, as both finalist are from the same team (Versacorp).
    • Bill Rancic was only 5–7 (with a 2–0 Project Manager Record) [11] and Kwame Jackson was 3–9 (1–2 as Project Manager) [12] in the 13 weeks. It is the only time in Apprentice history where the final two each had a losing record in all of the episodes throughout the season, because of all of the switching of members of teams (plus the men's four-week losing streak at the start of the season).
    • Omarosa does not fulfill her duties, and Jessica Simpson ends up being lost. Kwame's uncertainty about how to deal with her led to confusion about whether he could have fired her. During the season-three finale, George Ross clarified this point, saying that the project managers could use their employees in any way they wanted, a situation where Kwame would have been free to fire Omarosa from the task.
    • A mix-up involving a coin flip for which final tasks Bill and Kwame would take (which Bill won) led to Bill also having the #1 overall pick from the group of six fired contestants who returned to be tasked to a finalist's mission. Kwame selected Omarosa as his 2nd team member (after Troy) because Bill had already drafted Amy and Katrina and made it clear he would NOT have Omarosa on his team. Kwame also did not want Nick on his team—and knew that Bill would draft his friend and former teammate Nick with his last choice anyway—and chose Omarosa instead of Heidi because he felt Heidi would work hard as the last person standing and Omarosa was unlikely to do that if she was angry.
    • Episode recap from NBC.com

Week 15: "Season Finale"

Episodes

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleOriginal release date
11"Meet the Billionaire"January 8, 2004 (2004-01-08)
22"Sex, Lies and Altitude"January 15, 2004 (2004-01-15)
33"Respect"January 22, 2004 (2004-01-22)
44"Ethics Schmethics"January 29, 2004 (2004-01-29)
55"Trading Places"February 5, 2004 (2004-02-05)
66"Tit for Tat"February 12, 2004 (2004-02-12)
77"Dupe-lex"February 19, 2004 (2004-02-19)
88"Ice Escapades"February 26, 2004 (2004-02-26)
99"DNA, Heads and the Undead Kitty"March 4, 2004 (2004-03-04)
1010"Wheeling and Dealing"March 11, 2004 (2004-03-11)
1111"A Look Back"March 18, 2004 (2004-03-18)
1212"Circus, Circus"March 25, 2004 (2004-03-25)
1313"The Price is Height"April 1, 2004 (2004-04-01)
1414"Down to the Wire"April 8, 2004 (2004-04-08)
1515"Season Finale"April 15, 2004 (2004-04-15)

References

  1. Fearn-Banks, Kathleen; Burford-Johnson, Anne (October 3, 2014). Historical Dictionary of African American Television. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN   9780810879171.
  2. "Viewership numbers of primetime programs during the 2003–04 television season". Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  3. "Viewership numbers of primetime programs for the week of April 12–18, 2004" . Retrieved November 30, 2016.[ permanent dead link ]
  4. Carter, Bill (April 17, 2004). "'The Apprentice' Scores Ratings Near Top for the Season". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved May 18, 2022.
  5. 1 2 Wooten, Sara McIntosh (January 2009). Donald Trump: From Real Estate to Reality TV. Enslow Publishers, Inc. ISBN   9780766028906 . Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  6. "Smoking Gun – Donald Seeks to Trump "You're Fired" Mark" . Retrieved August 30, 2006.
  7. Pruitt, Bill (May 30, 2024). "The Donald Trump I Saw on The Apprentice". Slate. Retrieved June 1, 2024.
  8. "Men Lose Again! Jason Fired!". NBC. January 15, 2004. Archived from the original on August 21, 2004. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  9. Go, Jesamyn (March 12, 2004). "Fired ‘Apprentice’ contestant says racial slur used on the show" Archived 2018-08-14 at the Wayback Machine . Today . NBC. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  10. Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Republican National Convention on YouTube
  11. Archived 2006-06-29 at the Wayback Machine
  12. Archived 2006-06-29 at the Wayback Machine