The Apprentice (UK series seven)

The Apprentice UK
 
 

Series Seven

Series Seven of The Apprentice (UK) was a British reality television series, which was broadcast in the UK during 2011 from 10 May to 17 July on BBC One. The first two episodes of the series were aired a day apart from each other; the first on a Tuesday, the next in the usual timeslot of the show, along with subsequent episodes after it. Like the previous series, the final episode was aired on a Sunday. Filming of the series took place during the previous year in Autumn. The series was won by Tom Pellereau.[1][2][3]

By the end of the series, several records were made by two of the final candidates in the process. Pellereau initially held the record of least successful winner of The Apprentice, for winning only three tasks, never winning as a project manager and being a PM just once in the series; he now holds joint ownership of the record alongside Series 10 winner, Mark Wright. Along with this, he also became the first winner of the show, to have won fewer tasks than the runner-up, which happened again in Series 8, 9 and 10. Runner-up Helen Milligan, currently holds the record for the most successful candidate in the history of The Apprentice, winning ten out of eleven tasks during this series.

This series is notable for bringing about a change of format with the show's prize. Instead of a job with a six-figure salary, the winner would be given a £250,000 investment from Lord Sugar to start his or her own business, with him being the joint owner. This change in prize was not known by those applying to be candidates for the show, following the commencement of the application process in April 2010, as it was announced late in June that year. As a result, many that had already applied for the series were without a business plan, owing to the assumption that they would be winning a £100,000 salary job and not an investment. On 5 July 2011, a show source detailed that a change in the format of the tasks had also been made for the series, stating that the "interview" round would feature in the final episode of the series rather than the penultimate episode, meaning that no fired candidate would return in the finals as a result, while also revealing there would be four finalists instead of two.[4]

The 2011 series saw two specials aired alongside it, during the final weeks, including the return of a new edition of "The Final Five", aired on 7 July, and a new special called "How To Get Hired", aired on 15 July.

Candidates

The original women's team was called Venture and the men's team was called Logic. Two candidates – Alex and Ellie – never had the chance to be project manager.

Candidate Background Original team Age Result
Tom Pellereau Inventor Logic 31 Winner
Helen Milligan Executive Assistant to CEO Venture 30 Runner Up
Susan Ma Natural Skincare Entrepreneur Venture 21 Fired in week 12
Jim Eastwood Sales and Market Manager Logic 32 Fired in week 12
Natasha Scribbins Divisional Manager – Recruitment Venture 31 Fired in week 11
Melody Hossaini Founder & Director – Global Youth Consultancy Business Venture 26 Fired in week 10
Zoe Beresford Project Manager – Drinks Manufacturer Venture 26 Fired in week 9
Leon Doyle Fast Food Marketing Entrepreneur Logic 26 Fired in week 8
Glenn Ward Senior Design Engineer Logic 28 Fired in week 7
Edna Agbarha Business Psychologist Venture 36 Fired in week 6
Vincent Disneur Sales Manager – Telecoms Software Logic 29 Fired in week 5
Ellie Reed Managing Director Venture 33 Fired in week 5
Felicity Jackson Creative Arts Entrepreneur Venture 23 Fired in week 4
Gavin Winstanley Managing Director – Opticians Logic 27 Fired in week 3
Alex Britez Cabral Estate Agent Manager Logic 28 Fired in week 2
Edward Hunter Accountant Logic 25 Fired in week 1

Weekly results

Elimination chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Tom IN IN IN IN IN IN IN LOSE BR BR IN HIRED
Helen IN IN IN IN IN WIN IN IN WIN BR WIN RUNNER-UP
Susan IN IN WIN IN IN BR BR WIN IN IN BR FIRED
Jim IN IN IN IN IN IN LOSE IN IN IN LOSE FIRED
Natasha IN IN IN BR BR IN WIN IN IN WIN FIRED
Melody WIN IN IN IN IN IN IN BR BR FIRED
Zoe IN IN BR WIN IN LOSE IN IN FIRED
Leon BR LOSE IN IN IN IN IN FIRED
Glenn IN BR IN IN WIN IN FIRED
Edna IN WIN IN IN IN FIRED
Vincent IN IN BR IN FIRED
Ellie IN IN IN BR FIRED
Felicity IN IN IN FIRED
Gavin BR IN FIRED
Alex IN FIRED
Edward FIRED
     The candidate was on the winning team.
     The candidate was on the losing team.
     The candidate became Lord Sugar's new business partner and won The Apprentice.
     The candidate was the runner-up.
     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.

Episodes

Week 1: £250 Business Start Up

Week 2: Mobile Phone Application

Week 3: Discount Buying for the Savoy

Week 4: Beauty Treatments

Week 5: Create, Brand and Launch a Pet Food

Week 6: Rubbish

Week 7: Freemium Magazine Launch

Week 8: Paris

Week 9: Biscuit

Week 10: Flip It

Week 11: Fast Food Chain

Week 12: The Final

Criticism and controversy

Leon Doyle

On 12 June 2011, it was reported that contestant Leon Doyle was arrested after being mistaken for a hit and run killer reported on Crimewatch after the police were tipped off. At the time though he was on holiday and was released without charge when the real culprit Brett Kingsley was arrested.[10]

Melody Hossaini

Candidate Melody Hossaini became the target of an online campaign of abuse during the airing of the series who thought wrongly she was Muslim. She was branded a "bitch" by the bullies who thought she was Muslim and failed to respect their faith with other comments including "You don't deserve your surname." and "Melody is a bitch for eating sinful food". In reality though Hossaini practices the Zorostrian religion which places an emphasis on good deeds, thoughts and words.[11]

Glenn Ward and Zoe Beresford

At the end of the Freemium magazine task in Week 7 and in a clip shown in the You're Fired! episode that week, Lord Sugar revealed that he had seen many engineers fail at business in the past, and that was the example he had also seen in contestant Glenn Ward over the previous seven weeks who he fired in this episode. This provoked much anger among the wider engineering community and the press immediately following the episode – James Dyson was commonly held up as a prime example of an engineer/inventor who also had been a hugely successful businessman.[12][13]

It was also revealed that Glenn had been in a relationship with fellow candidate Zoe Beresford during the filming of the programme.[14] Former candidate Edna Agbarha, who was fired in Week 6 after being brought back into the boardroom by then-Project Manager Zoe, was reported to have accused her that the relationship was the only reason that she was brought back instead of Glenn and that it "clouded her judgement."[15] Glenn later revealed he and Zoe had split up after dating, much to the latter's devastation. In the same report, Glenn became image conscious of Zoe and they used to argue because he did not like her going without makeup or heels and that she was under pressure to look good.[16]

Ratings

Official episode viewing figures are from BARB.[17]

Episode
no.
Airdate Viewers
(millions)
BBC One
weekly ranking
1 10 May 2011 8.79 4
2 11 May 2011 8.30 7
3 18 May 2011 8.10 5
4 25 May 2011 8.62 4
5 1 June 2011 7.59 1
6 8 June 2011 8.62 3
7 15 June 2011 8.40 5
8 22 June 2011 8.78 2
9 29 June 2011 8.98 1
10 6 July 2011 9.42 1
11 13 July 2011 9.73 2
12 17 July 2011 10.24 1

Specials

Episode
no.
Airdate Viewers
(millions)
BBC One
weekly ranking
The Final Five
7 July 2011 5.29 12
How To Get Hired
15 July 2011 N/A N/A

References

  1. "The Apprentice won by non-stop ideas factory Tom Pellereau". Guardian. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  2. "Tom Pellereau strikes a blow for great British inventors". Daily Telegraph. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  3. "Tom Pellereau wins The Apprentice". RTÉ News. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  4. "The Apprentice 2011: Why the final wil be very different this year". New Magazine. New. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  5. "Episode 1: £250 Business Start Up". The Apprentice: Episodes. London, UK: BBC. 10 May 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  6. "Episode 2: Mobile Phone Application". The Apprentice: Episodes. London, UK: BBC. 11 May 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  7. "Episode 3: Discount Buying for the Savoy". The Apprentice: Episodes. London, UK: BBC. 18 May 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  8. "Episode 4: Beauty Treatments". The Apprentice: Episodes. London, UK: BBC. 25 May 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  9. "The Apprentice final – live blog". Guardian. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  10. Payne, Will (11 June 2011). "The Apprentice 2011: Leon Doyle arrested after being mistaken for Crimewatch suspect". Mirror Online.
  11. Cartledge, James (25 February 2014). "Apprentice star Melody Hossaini branded a 'bitch' in three-year campaign of abuse". Birmingham Mail.
  12. Dyson, James. "Engineers always do the business, Lord Sugar". the Guardian.
  13. "Lord Sugar criticised for 'engineers can't run businesses' comment". BusinessZone.
  14. "The Apprentice's Glenn Ward reveals truth about Zoe Beresford relationship". Metro. 16 June 2011.
  15. "Apprentice reject Edna blames Zoe and Glenn's relationship for exit". Metro. 9 June 2011.
  16. "Apprentice lovers Zoe Beresford and Glenn Ward split". Mirror Online. 12 February 2012.
  17. "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 16 September 2015.

External links

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