The Apprentice (American TV series) season 1 explained

Season Number:1
Bgcolour:lavender
Num Episodes:15
Network:NBC
Module1:
Num Contestants:16
Winner:Bill Rancic
Runner Up:Kwame Jackson
Film End:,
Next Season: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 at Trump Tower in Manhattan, located on the fourth floor. 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.

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 RancicCigar business ownerVersacorp32Chicago, IllinoisHired by Trump
(4–15–2004)
Kwame JacksonInvestment managerVersacorp29Charlotte, North CarolinaFired in the season finale
(4–15–2004)
Amelia "Amy" HenryAccount managerProtégé30Austin, TexasFired in week 13
(4–1–2004)
Nick WarnockCopier salesmanVersacorp27Los Angeles, CaliforniaFired in week 13
(4–1–2004)
Troy McClainMortgage brokerVersacorp32Boise, IdahoFired in week 12
(3–25–2004)
Katrina CampinsReal estate agentProtégé24Coral Gables, FloridaFired in week 11
(3–18–2004)
Heidi BresslerSenior account executiveProtégé30Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaFired in week 10
(3–11–2004)
Omarosa Manigault-StallworthPolitical consultantProtégé29Youngstown, OhioFired in week 9
(3–4–2004)
Ereka VetriniMarketing managerProtégé27New York, New YorkFired in week 8
(2–26–2004)
Tammy LeeStockbrokerProtégé36Seattle, WashingtonFired in week 7
(2–19–2004)
Jessie ConnersMarketing firm ownerProtégé21New Richmond, WisconsinFired in week 6
(2–12–2004)
Kristi FrankRestaurant ownerProtégé30Bel Air, CaliforniaFired in week 5
(2–5–2004)
Bowie HoggAccount executiveVersacorp25Arlington, TexasFired in week 4
(1–29–2004)
Sam SoloveyBusiness directorVersacorp27Chevy Chase, MarylandFired in week 3
(1–22–2004)
Jason CurisReal estate managerVersacorp24Detroit, MichiganFired in week 2
(1–15–2004)
David GouldVenture capitalistVersacorp31New York, New YorkFired in week 1
(1–8–2004)

Weekly results

CandidateOriginal teamWeek 5 teamWeek 7 teamWeek 9 teamWeek 11 teamFinal week teamApplication resultRecord as project manager
Bill RancicVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpVersacorpProtégéVersacorpHired 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-StallworthProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéProtégéFired 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

Final

Week 15: "Season Finale"

Episodes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fearn-Banks. Kathleen. Burford-Johnson. Anne. Historical Dictionary of African American Television. 3 October 2014. Rowman & Littlefield. 9780810879171. en.
  2. Web site: Viewership numbers of primetime programs during the 2003–04 television season. 30 November 2016. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930171419/http://www.abcmedianet.com/Web/progcal/dispDNR.aspx?id=060204_11. 30 September 2007.
  3. Web site: Viewership numbers of primetime programs for the week of April 12–18, 2004. 30 November 2016.
  4. News: Carter . Bill . 2004-04-17 . 'The Apprentice' Scores Ratings Near Top for the Season . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-05-18 . 0362-4331.
  5. Book: Wooten. Sara McIntosh. Donald Trump: From Real Estate to Reality TV. January 2009. Enslow Publishers, Inc.. 9780766028906. 1 December 2016. en.
  6. Web site: Smoking Gun – Donald Seeks to Trump "You're Fired" Mark . 2006-08-30 .
  7. News: Pruitt . Bill . The Donald Trump I Saw on The Apprentice . 1 June 2024 . Slate . 30 May 2024.
  8. Web site: Men Lose Again! Jason Fired!. https://web.archive.org/web/20040821002738/http://nbc.com/nbc/The_Apprentice/weekly_recap/week02a.shtml. August 21, 2004. NBC. January 15, 2004. August 13, 2018.
  9. Go, Jesamyn (March 12, 2004). "Fired ‘Apprentice’ contestant says racial slur used on the show" . Today. NBC. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  10. http://www.theapprenticerules.com/candidates/profile-bill-rancic.html
  11. http://www.theapprenticerules.com/candidates/profile-kwame-jackson.html