Young Apprentice

Young Apprentice
Genre Reality television series
Created by Mark Burnett
Starring Lord Sugar
Nick Hewer
Karren Brady
Narrated by Mark Halliley
Theme music composer Dru Masters[1]
Opening theme "Dance of the Knights" by Prokofiev
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 3
No. of episodes 22
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Talkback Thames in association with Mark Burnett Productions (2010–1)
Boundless in association with Mark Burnett Productions (2012)
Distributor FremantleMedia
Broadcast
Original channel BBC One
Picture format 16:9 (1080i HDTV)
Original run 12 May 2010 – 20 December 2012
Chronology
Related shows The Apprentice
External links
Website

Young Apprentice (Junior Apprentice in series 1) was a British reality television programme in which a group of twelve young people (ten in the first series), aged 16 and 17, compete to win a £25,000 prize from the British business magnate Lord Sugar. The six-part series began on BBC One and BBC HD on 12 May 2010, concluding on 10 June of the same year, and also featured Nick Hewer and Karren Brady as Sugar's advisors. Karren Brady made her debut on Junior Apprentice, as it aired before she appeared on the adult version. The programme concluded with Sugar awarding the prize fund to 17-year-old Arjun Rajyagor, with Tim Ankers finishing in second place.

The second series started in October 2011, and this time featured eight episodes and twelve contestants. The series was won by Zara Brownless, with James McCullagh as runner-up.

The third series started on 1 November 2012, also with twelve contestants. The series concluded on 20 December, and was won by Ashleigh Porter-Exley, with Lucy Beauvallet as runner-up. Maria Doran and Patrick McDowell finished in joint third place.

Originally proposed in March 2008 and confirmed in June 2009, Junior Apprentice received mostly positive reviews from critics. The programme is a spin-off from the series The Apprentice, which was in turn spawned from an American series of the same name, featuring the entrepreneur Donald Trump. Sugar's role under Gordon Brown's government sparked a debate over the BBC's political impartiality regulations in the run-up to the UK 2010 election, resulting in both Junior Apprentice and the sixth regular edition of The Apprentice being delayed.

On February 7, 2013, it was confirmed via Lord Sugar's Twitter account that Series 3 of Young Apprentice was its last, stating that the BBC decided not to renew for a fourth series.[2]

Production and broadcast

In March 2008, Sir Alan Sugar announced that he had proposed a teenage version of The Apprentice to the BBC to be broadcast around "the six, seven o'clock timeslot featuring 12 to 15-year-old kids"; however, he claimed that "nobody took any notice" of his suggestions.[3] Twelve months later, Sugar said that he was in negotiations regarding the programme and it was officially announced by the BBC and Talkback Thames on 20 May 2009 episode of The Apprentice: You're Fired!.[4][5] Applicants, of ages 16 and 17 and from a variety of social and educational backgrounds, were encouraged to apply via The Apprentice website in what was originally announced as a five-part series, with Sugar seeking to "promote enterprise amongst young people, as the future of our economy relies on them".[6] In all, 28,000 people applied and ten of these were selected for the programme.[7]

On 5 June 2009, Sugar was hired as the Labour Party Enterprise Tsar under Gordon Brown's government and assumed the title Lord Sugar.[8] Despite debates regarding whether Sugar could continue with his role due to the corporation's political impartiality, the BBC decreed that he was able to continue to feature on The Apprentice and its related programming.[9] However, due to this conflict of interest, both Junior Apprentice and the sixth series of The Apprentice were delayed until after the 2010 general election on 6 May 2010.[10]

The BBC announced on 3 May 2010 that Junior Apprentice was to begin on 12 May 2010 at 21:00 on BBC One and BBC HD.[11][12] Karren Brady, replacing Margaret Mountford, and Nick Hewer, assisted Sugar and oversaw the actions of the ten participants throughout the series.[13] The final instalment of the six episode series was broadcast on 10 June 2010.[14] The series was executive produced by Jo Wallace for the BBC, Mark Burnett and C. Scot Cru for Mark Burnett Productions and Sue Davidson and Michele Kurland for Talkback Thames.[14][15]

On 28 August 2010, the BBC confirmed that a second series of the Junior Apprentice had been commissioned. The second series once again featured 16 to 17-year-olds and was an extended 8 episode format. Applications for a third series opened during the second series, and series 3 launched on 1 November 2012.

On 30 August 2012, it was reported that Sugar had axed the show to concentrate on the adult version and also due to declining ratings compared to the ordinary version of the show. Lord Sugar later confirmed on Twitter that the reports were incorrect, and that it was still unknown how long the show would last. However, in February 2013, Lord Sugar confirmed on Twitter that the BBC had indeed cancelled the show.

Format

Karren Brady observes the candidates throughout the series.

The format of the programme is very similar to that of the regular series, but it was noted that Sugar, Brady and Hewer adopted a more gentle tone with the comparatively young participants.[16] Aiming to win a prize of £25,000, twelve candidates participate in a series of tasks over an eight-week period. Each week, the group is divided into two teams and must compete in a task relating to business. Each team then selects a project manager, who is responsible for the leadership of the team throughout that task, and the groups are observed by either Brady or Hewer. When the task is over, the teams return to the boardroom and Lord Sugar announces the winner of the task. While the winning team are treated to a reward, Lord Sugar, Brady and Hewer discuss the failings with the team that lost. The project manager of this losing team must then select two of their colleagues to return to the boardroom and face the possibility of being fired; from the fourth week onwards, all members of the losing team automatically return to the boardroom. A further discussion is held and Lord Sugar decides which one of the three he will fire from the competition. Unlike the original version of The Apprentice, none of the fired candidate of The Junior Apprentice are filmed as riding into a taxi during their walk of shame. Instead they take their ride back home in Lord Sugar's Frontera.

This process was followed until the end of the fifth week, then there were four candidates remaining. The final task saw the four equally divided into two teams and they were accompanied by previously fired candidates. On the tasks's conclusion, Sugar immediately fired the losing team and went onto decide which of the winning candidates to reward with the prize fund. Throughout the series, the candidates reside at a Georgian townhouse in Islington.[16]

Series 1

The first series featured ten candidates, divided into two teams initially by gender. The boys chose Instinct as their company name, and the girls chose Revolution. This was the second UK series in which every candidate had a chance to be a project manager at some point. This had previously occurred on the second series of the main Apprentice show.

Candidates

Candidate Original team Age Hometown Result
Arjun Rajyagor Instinct 17 Essex style="text-align:center" |Winner
Tim Ankers Instinct 17 Lancashire style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 6
Kirsty Cleaver Revolution 17 Scotland style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 6
Zoe Plummer Revolution 16 London style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 6
Emma Walker Revolution 16 Cheshire style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 5
Hannah Cherry Revolution 17 Bedfordshire style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 4
Rhys Rosser Instinct 17 Powys style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 3
Adam Eliaz Instinct 17 London style="text-align:center" |Quit in week 3
Hibah Ansary Revolution 16 Manchester style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 2
Jordan De Courcy Instinct 16 County Wicklow, Ireland style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 1

Episode summary

Revolution sold cheese in Covent Garden in the first task.

Week One [1.1]

Week Two [1.2]

Week Three [1.3]

Week Four [1.4]

Week Five [1.5]

Some of the fifth task was based in Amsterdam.

Week Six [1.6]

Results table

Week One Week Two Week Three Week Four Week Five The Finale
Arjun
Rajyagor
Losing team
Safe
Winning team Winning team Winning team Losing team
Project manager
Winner
Tim
Ankers
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Winning team Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Losing team
Project manager
Winning team Runner-Up
Kirsty
Cleaver
Winning team Losing team
Safe
Losing team
Safe
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Winning team
Project manager
Losing team
Zoe
Plummer
Winning team Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Winning team
Project manager
Winning team Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Losing team
Emma
Walker
Winning team Losing team
Safe
Winning team Winning team
Project manager
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Fired
(Week Five)
Hannah
Cherry
Winning team Winning team
Project manager
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Fired
(Week Four)
Rhys
Rosser
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Winning team Losing team
Project manager
Fired
(Week Three)
Adam
Eliaz
Losing team
Safe
Losing team
Project manager
Winning teamDeparted due to illness
(Week Three)
Hibah
Ansary
Winning team
Project manager
Losing team
Brought to the boardroom
Fired
(Week Two)
Jordan
De Courcy
Losing team
Project manager
Fired
(Week One)

Key:

     Member of Instinct
     Member of Revolution
Elimination chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6
Arjun IN IN IN IN LOSE HIRED
Tim BR IN BR LOSE IN FIRED
Kirsty IN IN IN BR WIN FIRED
Zoe IN BR WIN IN BR FIRED
Emma IN IN IN WIN FIRED
Hannah IN WIN BR FIRED
Rhys BR IN FIRED
Adam IN LOSE LEFT
Hibah WIN FIRED
Jordan FIRED
     The candidate received the £25,000 investment and won Junior Apprentice.
     The candidate was the runner-up.
     The candidate was on the winning team.
     The candidate was on the losing team.
     The candidate won as project manager on her team.
     The candidate lost as project manager on his team.
     The candidate was brought to the final boardroom.
     The candidate was fired.
     The candidate lost as project manager and was fired.
     The contestant left the competition due to illness.

Series 2

Twelve candidates took part in this series, and were initially divided by gender as normal. The boys chose the name Atomic for their team name, and the girls chose Kinetic. Two candidates - Mahamed and Ben - never had the chance to be project manager.

Candidates

Candidate Teams Age Hometown Result
Zara Brownless Kinetic 16 Hertfordshire style="text-align:center" |Winner
James McCullagh Atomic 17 County Londonderry, Northern Ireland style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 8
Haya Al Dlame Kinetic 17 London style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 7
Harry Maxwell Atomic 16 Northamptonshire style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 7
Lizzie Magee Kinetic 16 Liverpool style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 7
Harry Hitchens Atomic 16 Brighton style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 7
Hayley Forrester Kinetic 16 Shrewsbury style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 6
Gbemi Okunlola Kinetic 16 London style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 5
Lewis Roman Atomic 16 Merseyside style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 4
Hannah Richards Kinetic 16 Berkshire style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 3
Ben Fowler Atomic 16 Birmingham style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 2
Mahamed Awale Atomic 16 Brixton style="text-align:center" |Fired in week 1

Episode summary

Week One [2.1]

Week Two [2.2]

Week Three [2.3]

Week Four [2.4]

Week Five [2.5]

Week Six [2.6]

Week Seven [2.7]

Week Eight [2.8]

Results table

Elimination Chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Zara IN IN BR IN WIN BR IN HIRED
James BR IN IN WIN BR IN WIN FIRED
Haya IN IN IN LOSE IN WIN FIRED
Harry M. IN BR BR IN LOSE IN FIRED
Lizzie bgcolor=white|IN IN WIN IN IN LOSE FIRED
Harry H. LOSE IN IN IN IN IN FIRED
Hayley WIN IN IN BR IN FIRED
Gbemi IN WIN IN IN FIRED
Lewis IN LOSE IN FIRED
Hannah IN IN FIRED
Ben IN FIRED
Mahamed FIRED
     The candidate received the £25,000 investment and won Young 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 on the winning team (or, in Week 7, managed to avoid being fired).
     The candidate was on the losing team.
     The candidate was brought to the final boardroom.
     The candidate was on the losing team and was fired.
     The candidate lost as project manager and was fired.
     The candidate was on the winning team and was fired.

Teams

Elimination Chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Wins-Losses
Zara Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Kinetic Atomic Atomic Kinetic Kinetic 6-2
James Atomic Atomic Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Atomic 4-4
Haya Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Atomic Kinetic Kinetic 5-2
Harry M. Atomic Atomic Atomic Atomic Kinetic Atomic Atomic 0-7
Lizzie Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Atomic 4-3
Harry H. Atomic Atomic Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Kinetic Atomic 4-3
Hayley Kinetic Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Atomic Atomic 4-2
Gbemi Kinetic Kinetic Atomic Kinetic Kinetic 3-2
Lewis Atomic Atomic Atomic Atomic 0-4
Hannah Kinetic Kinetic Atomic 2-1
Ben Atomic Atomic 0-2
Mahamed Atomic 0-1

Series 3

Twelve candidates took part in this series, and were initially divided by gender as normal. The boys chose the name Odyssey for their team name, and the girls chose Platinum. Two candidates - Max and Amy - never had the chance to be project manager.

Candidates

Candidate Original teams Age Hometown Result
Ashleigh Porter-Exley Platinum 17 South Yorkshire Winner
Lucy Beauvallet Platinum 16 East Sussex Fired in Week 8
Maria Doran Platinum 17 Belfast, Northern Ireland Fired in Week 8
Patrick McDowell Odyssey 16 Merseyside Fired in Week 8
Andrew Tindall Odyssey 16 West Yorkshire Fired in Week 7
Steven Cole Odyssey 17 Kent Fired in Week 7
Navdeep Bual Platinum 16 Essex Fired in Week 6
David Odhiambo Odyssey 17 Bedfordshire Fired in Week 5
Alice Smith Platinum 17 Leicestershire Fired in Week 4
Amy Corrigan Platinum 17 London Fired in Week 3
Sean Spooner Odyssey 16 Northamptonshire Fired in Week 2
Maximillian "Max" Grodecki Odyssey 16 Kent Fired in Week 1

Episode summary

Week One [3.1]

Week Two [3.2]

Week Three [3.3]

Week Four [3.4]

Week Five [3.5]

Week Six [3.6]

Notes:

Week Seven [3.7]

Week Eight [3.8]

Results table

Elimination Chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Ashleigh WIN IN IN IN LOSE IN IN HIRED
Lucy IN WIN IN IN IN IN LOSE RUNNER-UP
Maria IN BR IN BR IN WIN IN FIRED
Patrick LOSE IN IN IN IN IN WIN FIRED
Andrew IN IN WIN IN BR LOSE FIRED
Steven IN IN LOSE IN IN BR FIRED
Navdeep IN IN IN BR WIN FIRED
David BR BR BR WIN FIRED
Alice IN IN IN FIRED
Amy IN IN FIRED
Sean IN FIRED
Max FIRED
     The candidate received the £25,000 investment and won Young 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 on the winning team.
     The candidate was on the losing team.
     The candidate was brought to the final boardroom.
     The candidate was fired.
     The candidate lost as project manager and was fired.

Teams

Elimination Chart
Candidate 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Wins-Losses
Ashleigh Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Odyssey 6-2
Lucy Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Platinum Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey 4-4
Maria Platinum Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Platinum Platinum Platinum 5-3
Patrick Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Platinum Platinum Platinum 4-4
Andrew Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Platinum Odyssey Odyssey 1-6
Steven Odyssey Platinum Platinum Platinum Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey 3-4
Navdeep Platinum Platinum Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey Odyssey 4-2
David Odyssey Odyssey Platinum Platinum Platinum 1-4
Alice Platinum Platinum Odyssey Odyssey 3-1
Amy Platinum Platinum Platinum 2-1
Sean Odyssey Odyssey 0-2
Max Odyssey 0-1

Reception

One critic argued that Sugar's soft approach towards the younger participants was "unnatural".

Critical response

Young Apprentice received a generally positive response from critics. Writing for The Guardian, Tim Lusher was complimentary of the programme's tone by claiming that "for once, even the losers look as if they could be winners one day" and Alex Fletcher of Digital Spy said that from the opening minutes of the first episode it was clear that "this spinoff series isn't going to be any softer or less entertaining than the original".[16][17] The Daily Telegraph's Benji Wilson also praised the series and argued that it "had all of the staggering self-regard and dim-witted hilarity we have come to expect from the contestants on the grown-up Apprentice".[37] The online version of Heat magazine, heatworld.com, praised the series and said that it was "amazing...might just be the best show we’ve seen all year", while The Guardian's Johnny Dee claimed that the programme was of better quality than its adult counterpart and proved that reality television "doesn't have to be nasty to be entertaining".[38][39]

Despite branding it as "compelling", John Crace of The Guardian claimed that the programme "gave us a first glimpse of the nightmare possibilities of Cameron Youth" and claimed that Sugar's softer approach to the young candidates came across as "unnatural". As well as the character of Zoe Plummer, also seen to be unnatural.[40] In The Independent, Tom Sutcliffe suggested that the sight of crying teenagers would leave the audience feeling uncomfortable.[41] Shortly before the programme started, both the National Federation of Enterprise Agencies and the Institute of Directors criticised the programme's lack of relevancy to business; the former argued that the BBC should instead be focusing on some of Britain's four million small businesses and the latter claimed that the programme should be more informative instead of "entertainment masquerading as business".[42]

In September 2012, it was announced that Young Apprentice was nominated for the 18th National Television Awards in the category Factual Entertainment.[43]

Transmissions

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 12 May 2010 10 June 2010 6
2 24 October 2011 12 December 2011 8
3 1 November 2012 20 December 2012 8

Ratings

Episode viewing figures from BARB.[44]

Series 1

Episode No. Airdate Total Viewers BBC One Weekly Ranking
1 12 May 2010 4,620,000 22
2 19 May 2010 4,340,000 23
3 26 May 2010 5,490,000 8
4 2 June 2010 4,590,000 11
5 9 June 2010 4,720,000 16
6 10 June 2010 5,420,000 8

Series 2

Episode No. Airdate Total Viewers BBC One Weekly Ranking
1 24 October 2011 4,740,000 19
2 31 October 2011 4,760,000 24
3 7 November 2011 4,730,000 25
4 14 November 2011 Under 4,530,000 Outside Top 30
5 21 November 2011 Under 4,220,000 Outside Top 30
6 28 November 2011 4,340,000 29
7 5 December 2011 4,610,000 28
8 12 December 2011 4,910,000 23

Series 3

Episode No. Airdate Total Viewers BBC One Weekly Ranking
1 1 November 2012 4,440,000 28
2 8 November 2012 4,340,000 27
3 15 November 2012 4,070,000 29
4 22 November 2012 Under 4,040,000 Outside Top 30
5 29 November 2012 Under 4,110,000 Outside Top 30
6 6 December 2012 Under 4,300,000 Outside Top 30
7 13 December 2012 Under 4,160,000 Outside Top 30
8 20 December 2012 4,580,000 27

References

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  2. 'Young Apprentice' not renewed by BBC One, confirms Lord Alan Sugar
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  43. . RadioTimes. 26 September 2012 http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-09-26/national-television-awards-2013-the-nominees-in-full. Retrieved 28 September 2012. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  44. "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board.

External links