The Apprentice (American season 6)


The Apprentice: Los Angeles is the sixth installment of the US version of The Apprentice reality television show. It was confirmed on November 30, 2005. Like the other Apprentice seasons, Donald Trump is the executive producer and host in his quest to hire a sixth apprentice. In a departure from the previous five Apprentice seasons, this one was shot in Los Angeles, California. As with seasons two through five, this season featured 18 contestants. Ivanka Trump made her debut as a full-time boardroom judge this season. Donald Trump Jr. also made his debut as a full-time judge this season.

Season 6 changes

In addition to the change of locale, the following changes have been made in the show's structure for the sixth season as described herein:
The following is the list of candidates for this season, with their original team placements after teams were selected in week one. Some contestants did not have to audition but were recruited by the casting members.
Team 1Team 2
KineticArrow

CandidateBackgroundOriginal teamAgeHometownResult
Stefani SchaefferDefense attorneyArrow32Los Angeles, CaliforniaHired by Trump
James SunInternet company ownerArrow29Seattle, WashingtonFired at end of the season finale
Nicole D'AmbrosioReal estate brokerArrow27Chicago, Illinois10Fired in middle of the season finale
Frank LombardiReal estate developerArrow28Bronx, New York10Fired in middle of the season finale
Kristine LefebvreLicensing attorneyKinetic37Los Angeles, California10Fired in week 12
Heidi AndrolSales managerKinetic26Santa Monica, California10Fired in week 12
Tim UrbanTutoring company ownerArrow24Los Angeles, California10Fired in week 11
Angela RuggieroOlympic athleteKinetic26Oyster Bay, New York10Fired in week 10
Muna HeavenFamily law litigatorKinetic28Matawan, New Jersey10Fired in week 9
Surya YalamanchiliBrand managerKinetic24Cincinnati, Ohio10Fired in week 8
Jennifer HoffmanPublicist, Writer, Performance ArtistKinetic26Phoenix, Arizona and Huntington, NY10Fired in week 7
Derek ArtetaEntertainment lawyerKinetic34Los Angeles, California10Fired in week 7
Aimee TrottierSurgical sales rep.Kinetic32Miami, Florida10Fired in week 6
Aaron AltscherReal estate sales managerArrow25Chicago, Illinois10Fired in week 5
Marisa DeMatoClass action attorneyKinetic28Wellington, Florida10Fired in week 4
Michelle SorroReal estate consultantArrow34Los Angeles, California10Quit in week 3
Carey SherrellMarketing firm ownerArrow25Atlanta, Georgia10Fired in week 2
Martin ClarkeAttorney/ProfessorArrow37Atlanta, Georgia10Fired in week 1

Olympic candidates

During the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino, Donald Trump announced that 12 Olympians from Team United States 2006 would be vying for a spot on this edition. Voting continued throughout the entire Olympics concluding on the Closing Ceremonies. Although not all of them made it to the "interview process", the 12 Olympians are as follows:
KineticArrow
PMHeidiFrank
1DerekCarey
2AimeeTim
3MarisaAaron
4AngelaNicole
5SuryaJames
6KristineStefani
7MunaMichelle
8JennMartin

Weekly results

Episodes

Episode 1 – To Have and Have Not

The sixth season of The Apprentice was by far the worst-received season of The Apprentice, and also the least watched on its initial run. Critics and many fans alike were very unfavorable to the various radical changes the show had made and thought the show lost its original appeal. They believed that producers were trying to incorporate more of a sensational edge to the show, rather than focus on the aspects of the business world, and some speculated that the show was trying to specifically mirror Survivor, with having the weekly losing candidates live in tents with no power or running water. Moreover, footage of the actual projects that candidates would work on was substantially cut, after the tasks in this season often took up as little as a fifth of the episode, whereas the tasks in previous seasons took up between a third and a half of the episode's running time. Trump later blamed creator and executive producer Mark Burnett for these ideas, who ironically is also the creator of Survivor. The 90-minute premiere of the sixth season averaged 9.1 million overall viewers and a 4.1/10 rating/share in the Adults 18–49 demographic. The figure for total viewers for the show's sixth season debut was much lower than that of the show's fifth season debut. The second episode of season 6 averaged 7.3 million viewers.

Candidate websites

*
*
*
*
*
*
*