'It's a Little Bit Too Much to Ask Someone to Be President of an
$800 Million Building When They Haven't
Had That Kind of Experience,' Says Trump
NEW YORK, May 15 /PRNewswire/ -- As the winner of the second "Apprentice,"
Kelly Perdew should be in line for a top job in the Trump organization. But
you'd never know that from his office, reports Associate Editor Ramin Setoodeh
in the May 23 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands Monday, May 16). Perdew's desk
is in a small, windowless space next to the assistant to Donald Trump's wife,
Melania (Perdew has no assistant). The walls are bare, except for a dry-erase
board and a U.S. map, stuck with pins marking the distributors he's signed to
buy his boss's new line of bottled water, Trump Ice.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050515/NYSU010 )
Spend some time with winners of the first two seasons of "Apprentice," and
the reality of this reality show becomes clear: the apprentices'
$250,000-a-year gigs are less about climbing the corporate ladder, and more
about using their "Apprentice" celebrity to promote Trump, reports Setoodeh.
"It's a little bit too much to ask someone to be the president of an $800
million building when they haven't had that kind of experience," says Trump.
Perdew's calendar is filled with many distractions -- speeches to
entrepreneurs about Trump and "The Apprentice," deadlines for writing a book
about how the military teaches business skills, and acting in an ad for the
Department of Defense. Bill Rancic, the first season's winner who was
ostensibly put in charge of the $800 million "Chicago: Trump Tower" project,
seems to spend as much of his time reliving his TV star turn, too, reports
Setoodeh. He'll warm up a crowd of real-estate brokers or potential buyers by
talking about "The Apprentice," then the marketing team takes over to talk
specifics.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7856555/site/newsweek/
(Read full article at http://www.Newsweek.com.)
SOURCE Newsweek
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CONTACT: Abigail Lorge of Newsweek, +1-212-445-4078
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