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Weekly Worker 575 Thursday May 5 2005
Keeping it real
Lawrence Parker confesses to being a fan of the BBC2 show The Apprentice
The BBC2 programme The apprentice involves 14 entrepreneurial gunslingers
jousting for the chance to be employed by Sir Alan Sugar (estimated to
have a business empire worth £700 million) for a six-figure salary.
The contestants have been taken through a variety of business-related
activities, from flogging cuddly toys in Harrods to devising an advertising
scheme. Generally, the competitors have been split into two teams. One
of the losing team is sacked.
By the time you read this we will know who is the winner of The apprentice
- Saira and Tim will go head to head in the final show. This begs the
question as to why this needs to be written now. Surely it would be better
to wait until the series ends. Well, no actually. Given that it is increasingly
obvious that the producers of The apprentice (itself a derivative of a
more razzy US production) measure themselves against entertainment values
rather than the more prosaic task of finding someone who is willing to
be growled at by Sir Alan for the next five years.
Of course, this is not the message intended. The codes of ubiquitous reality
TV are pushed to the forefront: there is a real job on offer
and, in an upmarket echo of Big brother, the candidates have been housed
in a luxurious eight-bedroom mansion on the banks of the Thames. Reality
TV is probably the most depressing cultural monument to the early 21st
century. The intensely artificial values of the entertainment industry
are now glossed over with this desire for the real, pushing
an implicit message that we do not really need human direction or control
over anything. Just let the cameras roll and reality flood
in.
The key to this is probably one of the finalists, saleswoman Saira. This
woman is a walking human-relations disaster. She manages to offend and
alienate just about everyone she comes into contact with. Highly strung
and a self-confessed bullshitter, you would think twice about getting
her to do any sort of task that involved other people (other than sales
work, where I will own that these characteristics could be prerequisites).
But, on the other hand, she makes great television.
The other finalist, transport manager Tim, is Sairas opposite (again,
an obvious production value). He is a nice guy. When he won his place
in the final, after bluntly detailing his reservations, Sir Alan told
him: Ive read about your deprived background. Youre
from the East End like me. Im proud of you. What could be
more consoling than this faux-proletarian bonhomie, particularly after
Tim has jumped over some of the more ridiculous middle class buffoons
who littered the earlier programmes? Poor boy makes good. Interestingly
too, both of the finalists are black.
There is also the distinct sense that The apprentice is a public relations
exercise for Sir Alan Sugar. Most people do not really associate him with
being a successful businessman. They think of him as the bloke who got
hounded out of the chairmans seat at Tottenham Hotspur Football
Club after the supporters turned on him (although he still owns 13% of
the shares). Therefore, watching Sir Alans ritual weekly humiliation
of the cream of our entrepreneurial talent gives out the message
that, no, this guy is not in fact to be trifled with. One can sense the
purging quality this offers to Sir Alan after having had to put up with
Spurs fans calling him a wanker (and other less flattering
epithets) at home games for a couple of years.
The BBC should be congratulated for making Wednesday evenings go that
bit quicker. But do not use The apprentice for an insight into business
recruitment practices or the cultural mores of modern Britain. Coronation
Street is probably a much better bet.
Lawrence Parker
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