The second season of NBC's smash hit, "The Apprentice,"
will this time feature 18 candidates from all walks of life,
including both Ivy League MBA graduates and street entrepreneurs
with no college education.
In the first episode, star and executive producer Donald
Trump will split the candidates into two teams of nine. Each
week, they will endure rigorous business tasks while living
together in a hip Manhattan loft apartment. Prominent Fortune
500 companies were enlisted to participate in many of the
tasks. The tasks will test their intelligence, chutzpah and
street-smarts. They will face the challenges of living in
close quarters and must complete sometimes humorous, but always
difficult, job assignments and will be forced to think outside
the box in order to outshine each other to get to the top.
The competition and the boardroom drama will all be taken
to the next level during the second season. The candidates
will face far more intense tasks and the stakes will be much
higher. Donald Trump and his trusted colleagues -- George
Ross and Carolyn Kepcher -- will frame each episode, beginning
with the task delivery and ending with the climactic boardroom
showdown. And, each week, one person will hear those dreaded
words -- "You're Fired!"
As the winner of the competition, the second "apprentice"
will be granted the dream job of a lifetime with The Trump
Organization and a hefty six-figure salary.
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With his acting career going nowhere, Anthony is torn between providing for his son and teaching him about determination. He is almost convinced that he must put his acting ambitions on hold and give in to Joe's demands that he change the direction of his life. It takes Tuga to remind him that, aside from each other, their dreams are all they have.
This semi-autobiographical comedy about fathers and sons is from actor/producer Anthony Anderson, writer/producer Adam Glass, executive producer Marco Pennette (Caroline in the City) and executive producer/director James Widdoes (Reba, My Wife and Kids) for Warner Bros. Television Production Inc.
Capping off the night with another new ethnically mixed comedy,
'Barbershop' star Anthony Anderson plays a struggling actor
and single dad who moves back home to provide a stable environment
for his eight-year-old son. Add a supportive mother ('Amen''s
Roz Ryan) and a cantankerous dad ("Good Times" star
John Amos) to the mix and you have a sitcom. The problem with
leading out of relocated "Grounded For Life" is since
that sitcom moved from FOX to The WB, its tone has been watered
down considerably. A more potentially serious-in-nature comedy
may not be the perfect fit.