There are sixteen cameras continuously running while a Boardroom sequence is being shot. Many cameras are positioned behind what appear to be large mirrors that surround the Boardroom. The door that Donald Trump uses to enter the Boardroom actually leads from a narrow room that houses multiple cameras hidden by mirrors.
It just looks like a hallway from the camera angle used. Trump's red chair sits upon a raised platform about 4 inches high in order to make Trump appear to tower over everyone else despite Trump already being 6'3'' , emphasizing his supreme authority.
Series creator Mark Burnett originally conceived of the contestants in the first season being divided into college graduates vs. However, of those who applied to be on the show there were not enough credible contestants who did not graduate from college. As a result, the teams were instead divided into males and females. The popularity of the show caused a very large number of people to apply to be contestants and the producers were then able to choose a full team with only those with high school educations that was more or less evenly matched with those who graduated from college.
This became the premise of the competition in the third season. According to interviews from the former contestants, the boardroom set made in the trump tower is a cheaper-built one than ones often used for TV.
While filming, there are many different shots the crew wants. While seated they are to sit up straight and not put their hands on the table might cause markings. The apartment we see the contestants return to was built as a set in the Trump Tower. Mayor Pete Buttigieg criticized Trump for draft dodging Vietnam by having a phony "bone spur" diagnosis conjured up by doctors on his family's payroll.
He said the following at a Fox Town Meeting: "I don't have a problem standing up to somebody who was, you know, working on season 7 of Celebrity Apprentice when I was packing my bags for Afghanistan," Buttigieg also said. During the final episode, entitled You're Hired, the host is joined by the winner and runner-up of the hit show, while Lord Sugar is also on hand to explain his decision. It broadcasts straight after the main show, at Applications are taken via the show's official website.
Each series of The Apprentice begins with ten contestants - five men and five women, claiming to be the cream of entrepreneurial talent - being shoved into a posh house in London.
Then once a week they are woken up early, sent to a mystery location and split into two teams, with one of Lord Sugar's aids spying on each. The teams are given identical tasks and must assign a team leader and other roles before getting down to work. The production team, including all crew, is large. On each task there will be four crews filming each with a producer and researcher - one for each half of the two teams.
In order to make it possible to properly film the boardroom, where there are up to 23 people around a table, a lot of cameras are needed. In order to set up and manoeuvre those cameras properly without interrupting proceedings, the series director needs to work from a gallery. Therefore it is not possible to film the boardroom scenes from Lord Sugar's real boardroom.
They are filmed in a studio. Lord Sugar is not given a script of any kind for the boardroom. He is entirely in charge of what happens there. He does not wear an earpiece, so the production team cannot interrupt him or feed things to him in the boardroom.
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