{"url":"https://slate.com/culture/2024/05/donald-trump-news-2024-trial-verdict-apprentice.html","title":"The real Donald Trump behind The Apprentice con","domain":"slate.com","imageUrl":"https://images.pexels.com/photos/34367563/pexels-photo-34367563.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&h=650&w=940","pexelsSearchTerm":"Trump","category":"Politics","language":"en","slug":"aa7d824f","id":"aa7d824f-e7e8-4331-a125-3098dd1de870","description":"Former *Apprentice* producer Bill Pruitt reveals behind-the-scenes deceptions that built Trump's TV image after his 20-year NDA expired.","summary":"## TL;DR\n- Former *Apprentice* producer Bill Pruitt reveals behind-the-scenes deceptions that built Trump's TV image after his 20-year NDA expired.\n- Trump allegedly used the N-word about Black finalist Kwame Jackson, asking if America would buy a \"n— winning,\" caught on tape.\n- The show hid Trump's incompetence, sexism, and real estate flaws to sell a confident billionaire myth that aided his rise.\n\n## The story at a glance\nBill Pruitt, a producer on the first two seasons of *The Apprentice*, describes how the show portrayed Donald Trump as a savvy billionaire despite staging facts about his wealth and character. This comes right after Trump's hush money trial verdict, when his TV persona from the 2004 hit series remains central to his image. The piece aired days after the May 30, 2024, guilty verdict on 34 felony counts.[[1]](https://slate.com/culture/2024/05/donald-trump-news-2024-trial-verdict-apprentice.html)\n\n## Key points\n- *The Apprentice* debuted January 8, 2004, drew up to 28 million viewers for the season one finale, and transformed Trump from tabloid figure into a prime-time authority despite his bankruptcies.\n- Production faked opulence: Trump's real offices were cramped and shabby, so crews built a soundstage replica; his properties like Trump Taj Mahal had broken signs and bad smells, shot around.\n- Trump leered at and demeaned women on set, calling a camera operator \"too heavy,\" comparing another to Ivanka, and gesturing at a contestant's breasts while deciding to fire her.\n- Dialogue was overdubbed because Trump forgot contestants' names and task details; producers fed him lines later in a soundproof room for seamless edits.\n- During a recorded pre-finale meeting, Trump rejected advisor Carolyn Kepcher's praise for Kwame Jackson by saying, \"Yeah... but, I mean, would America buy a n— winning?\"—no one stopped production.\n- An architect at Trump National Golf Club told Pruitt that Trump stiffed him on payment, a pattern also seen in Trump's later $25 million Trump University settlement.\n- Trump's campaign spokesman called the incidents \"completely fabricated and bullshit,\" saying they resurface due to Democratic desperation.[[1]](https://slate.com/culture/2024/05/donald-trump-news-2024-trial-verdict-apprentice.html)\n\n## Details and context\nPruitt frames the show as a \"long con\" like a \"pig in the poke,\" where viewers bought Trump's confidence without seeing the reality. Production relied on editing tricks common to reality TV—staging, selective shots, and post-production fixes—to create drama and polish, much like *Survivor* rotates locations. This hid Trump's on-set struggles, like needing help to sound authoritative.\n\nThe N-word moment occurred in a conference recorded to avoid FCC tampering claims, with producers, showrunner Jay Bienstock, and advisor Carolyn Kepcher present. Jackson had impressed by managing chaotic teammate Omarosa at the rundown Taj Mahal, but Trump picked white finalist Bill Rancic anyway. No tape has surfaced publicly, and Pruitt doubts it ever will.\n\nTrump's behavior echoed later scandals: recruiting Stormy Daniels for the show despite her job, then allegedly paying her hush money (basis of his trial), and the *Access Hollywood* tape dismissed as banter. The show's success—Emmy nod, TCA praise—gave Trump a decade on NBC, boosting his brand before politics.\n\n## Key quotes\n- \"Yeah... but, I mean, would America buy a n— winning?\" — Donald Trump, to producers about Kwame Jackson (recorded, per Pruitt).[[1]](https://slate.com/culture/2024/05/donald-trump-news-2024-trial-verdict-apprentice.html)\n- \"She’s too heavy.\" — Trump, ordering a female camera operator off an elevator.\n- \"There’s a beautiful woman behind that camera... That’s all I want to look at.\" — Trump, about a blond female operator.\n\n## Why it matters\nThe article spotlights how *The Apprentice* crafted Trump's enduring image as a decisive leader, influencing his 2016 win and beyond, while hiding traits like racism and sexism that clash with that persona. For voters, it underscores the gap between Trump's polished TV self and reported private conduct, raising questions about authenticity in his political pitch. Watch if any *Apprentice* outtakes surface, though Pruitt believes they are gone forever, or for Trump's response beyond denial.","hashtags":["#trump","#apprentice","#realitytv","#politics","#mediamanipulation","#nda"],"sources":[{"url":"https://slate.com/culture/2024/05/donald-trump-news-2024-trial-verdict-apprentice.html","title":"Original article"}],"viewCount":4,"publishedAt":"2026-04-08T16:19:29.849Z"}