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00:00Previously, on The Apprentice.
00:13Your task today is creating a new brand identity for a brand new product.
00:19The challenge, advertise a box of cereal with an original cartoon character.
00:26Oh my God!
00:29Today's team created superhero Pants Man.
00:33What's that? You're like the shape of an Easter egg.
00:36While Kate's team flew with Captain Squawk.
00:39I'm older, that's the pirate mix.
00:43Philip and Lorraine constantly clashed.
00:46I'm OK with it, but not overly OK.
00:49It's a bit late in the day now, we're going to be off to suggestions.
00:52And Kimberley lost control of Mona.
00:55You either want my constructive criticism or you don't.
00:59And I've had enough.
01:01Kate's crew presented a box of treasure.
01:04That is awesome!
01:06I really like the box, I think you've done a very good job.
01:09And sailed to victory.
01:13Leaving Kimberley green with envy.
01:16You know where it would have stood out, don't you?
01:18It would have stood out if it was on the fertiliser shelf or the cat food.
01:21That's where it would have stood out. You're fired.
01:24And the fifth casualty of the boardroom.
01:28Now ten remain to fight for the chance to become The Apprentice.
01:34Hello?
01:36Hello, this is Sir Alan's office.
01:38Good morning.
01:40Sir Alan would like you to meet him in West London.
01:42The car will be outside in 30 minutes.
01:44Cheers.
01:48Hello.
01:50Good morning.
01:52Sir Alan would like you to meet him in West London.
01:54The car will be outside in 30 minutes.
01:56Cheers.
01:58The car will be outside in 30 minutes.
02:00Cheers.
02:06West London in half an hour.
02:10West London in half an hour.
02:12Cheers.
02:28Summoned to meet Sir Alan,
02:30the ten remaining candidates head west to an auctioneer's warehouse in Chiswick.
02:42MUSIC
02:53Good morning. Good morning, Sir Alan.
02:55Well, as you can see, we're here at Chiswick Auction House
03:00and in this place people come to have their products valued and sold.
03:06The task this week is all about selling
03:10with a little twist to it.
03:12I've got both teams the same collection of items,
03:16some old, some new.
03:18Your job is to make sure you know what each of them are worth
03:22and then go out and sell them.
03:25Just a word of warning, don't take everything at face value.
03:29Now, I'm going to mix the teams up a little bit.
03:32Kate, I'd like you to go over there to Ignite
03:35and Nurul, I'd like you to come over here to Empire.
03:39And the team leader for Ignite is going to be Philip
03:43and the team leader of Empire is going to be you, Ben.
03:47The team that comes back with the highest amount of sales will win
03:51and the team that doesn't will lose
03:53and in that team, one of you will be fired.
03:56You've got one day's trading,
03:58so I want you back by six o'clock tonight,
04:01on the dot, with the money you've made.
04:03OK, everything clear?
04:05Yes, Sir Alan.
04:07Well, good luck. Off you go.
04:15Knowing the value of something is key to getting the best price
04:20and Sir Alan expects them to find it out.
04:23I've given them ten items.
04:25To be honest, I don't expect them to sell all of them.
04:28It's more important that the ones they do sell
04:31are sold for the right price and the right value.
04:34No way!
04:37Both teams have a back room at the auction house
04:40to value their items.
04:42Ooh! What the hell is that?
04:45I think some might be red herrings.
04:47Yeah.
04:48Ooh, look at the chair.
04:50Oh, wow, it's a toilet chair.
04:52It's a bog. Yeah, it's an old-fashioned toilet chair.
04:55It's a little bit wobbly, Phil.
04:57It is a skillet. Don't yank it too much.
04:59What are you talking about?
05:00Among the junk, some valuable items,
05:03like a pair of vintage shoes...
05:07..an Indian rug worth over £200...
05:12..and in a box of books of first edition.
05:17It's very important that you know the fair value of everything
05:20that you're selling.
05:21Project manager for the first time, 22-year-old Ben Clark.
05:25Remember that this is a real bartering stuff.
05:28It's, you know... Street sales.
05:30It is. It's quite a rugged sport, to be honest. Yeah.
05:33I am a natural-born leader.
05:35Sandhurst clearly saw that in me,
05:37and that's why I got an army scholarship.
05:39And under those situations where I am under extreme pressure,
05:43i.e. heavy gunfire, explosions going off around me,
05:47people getting injured, that's when I can bring a team together,
05:50that's when I can lead.
05:51Get a yellow pages up, please,
05:53and phone a couple of fishmongers
05:55and get some estimates for jelly deals, please.
05:58How much is one of those skeletons worth new?
06:00I've got the quote. £159.95 plus VAT.
06:03That's the cheapest range.
06:05Very good work. Very good work.
06:09On the other team, project manager Philip
06:12wants last week's infighting out of the way.
06:14You know, it's really important that we get our heads down on this one
06:17and get a result, because we've had a bit of a tough ride,
06:20especially the last task.
06:21Mayor Lorraine was sort of picked out as slightly irrational
06:24in our thought process and the way we would speak to people,
06:27so I'll say bye.
06:28Big Ed's going to rein it in a little bit,
06:30and if I'm being a jerk, tell us and I'll try to listen.
06:32So it's all good.
06:33So we just need to get fired up and get all this stuff sorted.
06:36You know what we need to do as well now? We're starting to get valuations.
06:39We need to start keeping a running total.
06:41Basically, the name on it is Langley G...
06:44Despite his plea for unity, there's immediate disagreement.
06:48Lorraine's seriously wasting time with that rug. It's not very old.
06:54You'd be surprised, though.
06:55Have you seen the back of it? It's pristine.
06:57It's just not even well looked after. Hang on.
07:00It's nylon.
07:05Lorraine is completely erratic, she's volatile.
07:07For instance, there, she's looking at a carpet
07:09that's probably made about five years ago,
07:11and she's looking through her antiques book,
07:13trying to identify with a Persian rug.
07:15That's the sort of things that gets me back up,
07:17but I've just got to try and resist that a little bit more
07:19and just try and get along.
07:20OK, right, let's start packing everything up, guys.
07:24Ben splits his troops.
07:26Skeletons coming with myself, Deborah...
07:29No, these three.
07:30Keen to lead from the front, he's taking seven items
07:34and arming the rest of his squad with three.
07:37There's nothing that you want us to take,
07:39so it seems like there's four of them.
07:41One, two, three, four, five, six, seven.
07:43You're taking seven items, which is great.
07:45This is the sort of stuff that will sell easier in a market.
07:48It's very simple.
07:49Right, everybody, hands on deck.
07:51Myself, Mona and Lorraine have taken the antiquities to a valuer.
07:55Splitting his team, Philip divides the items equally.
07:59Howard and Kate are going to take the more contemporary items,
08:02the books and the shoes and the jelly deals and the bike.
08:06With eight hours to go before they must be back in the boardroom...
08:12..they're off.
08:15Pretty tough task. Yeah.
08:17The hardest part is trying to establish
08:20what the correct retail price is.
08:22Yeah, what you're trying to sell it for.
08:24Because you need to get selling as quickly as possible,
08:26so you could spend all day researching.
08:28But there's a few things you've got to find out.
08:30What the selling price is, who buys it, where those people are.
08:33It's quite a lot to do in a day.
08:40Convinced the skeleton has the highest value...
08:44Oh, shit!
08:46..Philip's first stop, a dealer in old curiosities.
08:51Let's see if we can sell a skeleton.
08:53Hello, are you all right?
08:55Sorry, this is Lorraine. Hello, Lorraine, how are you?
08:58And Keith.
08:59Yeah, how are you?
09:00Skeleton's amazing, isn't it? It is, it's a little beauty.
09:03Have you ever sold something like this before?
09:05No. No.
09:06It's not the kind of thing that we would sell,
09:09purely because it's just too new.
09:11I don't know where you'd actually go without one of these.
09:14There's shops near universities, aren't there?
09:16Yeah. You know, where these things turn up.
09:18You know, the medical colleges.
09:20Thank you all so much.
09:25David Bailey. Who's David Bailey?
09:27Photography.
09:28Is it in foreign?
09:30It's signed me and it's in English.
09:33Needing to get his books valued,
09:35Ben leads an assault on dealers in Charing Cross Road.
09:41Hi there. Hi. I'm Ben Clark. How do you do?
09:44I've got this antiques book.
09:46Miller's Antiques Price Guide.
09:48This is Brandy Chell's book in a tenner.
09:51Damaged book.
09:53World famous for putting value on the printed word,
09:56Charing Cross Road's experts are used to sorting the gems from the junk.
10:01I don't know, I'd have to check that.
10:04But they can't be rushed.
10:07Have a look, there's more writing further on.
10:09Right. On each character.
10:11Yes.
10:14Is that something you'd be interested in?
10:26That one looks like Pence.
10:29And...
10:33Um...
10:35I think we're going to have to ask you to leave.
10:43It's not going to be worth a huge amount, even with...
10:47I mean, it's...
10:52..sort of £10 at the most.
10:54The absolute most in that.
10:57A couple of valuations and nothing sold.
11:01Ben beats a retreat.
11:03We can't take any more shit from them.
11:05You know what they're like, they're book people,
11:07they don't want to waste your time.
11:09I'm fed up of these book people talking shit to me for too long.
11:13I would have preferred to be project manager
11:15on a couple of the other tasks,
11:17but this is a horrible, grotty task to get involved in as PM.
11:22Very, very difficult to sell stuff.
11:27Right, OK, the plan is, I think, the skeleton is going to be
11:30the one that makes us the most money effectively,
11:32or somewhere around there.
11:33So I think it's important that we get down to King's College
11:36School of Medicine over the road.
11:37There should be some shops there that sell medical equipment,
11:39second-hand medical equipment, sure there is.
11:41While Philip is hooked on the skeleton,
11:43Lorraine is convinced the rug has real value.
11:46Can we just make a phone call to clarify that?
11:48We do have the spec on it.
11:50It's an 8x8 circular nylon rug produced in the last...
11:53I need to have it. Yeah, I mean, that's what it is.
11:55You can't just phone a place up and say,
11:57I've got a rug that's this, how much is it worth?
11:59What we need to concentrate on is the skeleton.
12:01Try and heed some of my advice, because you're ignoring what I'm saying.
12:05Lorraine, I kind of grasp her, you know, the way she thinks,
12:07the way she's referring to some of the items.
12:09It's a real struggle working alongside her,
12:11and just everything that comes out of her mouth is just bollocks.
12:14I just thought that, you know, it could be a one-off opportunity.
12:18Believing valuations are costing time,
12:21Ben's new plan of attack, just sell.
12:26We're not going to let them waste our time this time, OK?
12:30Hi there. I'm Ben Clark.
12:32I understand that you specialise in first edition.
12:34We do, especially James Bond books. Oh, do you, really? They're brilliant.
12:37I'd be keen to hear your recommendation of what you would buy it at.
12:41We'd probably pay in the region of £80 to £100,
12:46sell it for about £120, £150, that sort of thing. Wow.
12:50If you could make a decision on, I think,
12:52£100 is really the lowest we could go to as a group,
12:55would you be happy to go ahead and take on that?
12:58Hmm. Yeah.
13:00Well, £100. That's fantastic. Thank you very much.
13:03Thank you very much. OK. Brilliant.
13:09Oh, man.
13:11Bloody skeleton.
13:17Spotted by Philip opposite the hospital.
13:21Let's see if we can sell a skeleton.
13:23An opportunity.
13:25Is that a pub there, isn't it?
13:27We're going to go inside the pub.
13:29If there's any doctors having a lunchtime drink.
13:31Yeah, good idea. Come on.
13:39Good afternoon, guys. Hi.
13:41Are you guys doctors or junior doctors or...?
13:44Sorry.
13:46Are any of you guys doctors or nurses?
13:49No, we have a plate of doctors and nurses, I'm sure.
13:52LAUGHTER
13:53Anybody interested in buying a skeleton?
13:55LAUGHTER
13:56No?
13:58Anybody interested in buying a skeleton?
14:00How much?
14:02How much?
14:03How much? We're talking now. That's good.
14:05We're looking.
14:07If you had it, I'd give you two quid right now.
14:09LAUGHTER
14:11Cheers, mate.
14:12What's this normal retail?
14:14This summing up, you should know it's £150 to £300.
14:17£150 cash.
14:20£150. What, er...
14:22£165 cash you've got to deal.
14:24I'll tell you what, give us £160 cash you've got to deal.
14:26£160 cash. You've got it.
14:28Good man. Good man. Thank you very much.
14:30Cheers.
14:31Oh, hell.
14:33That's it. Now we're talking.
14:36They're very lucky they managed to sell their skeleton.
14:39They found someone in a bar who'd actually wanted one all his life,
14:42he said. That was luck.
14:44But it did show them that if you go in and try to sell things,
14:47then maybe you'll succeed.
14:49LAUGHTER
14:52It's not bad. It's not bad.
14:54At a market in London's East End, the other half of Philip's team.
15:00Anyone interested in buying a bike?
15:02Anyone to buy some riding boots?
15:04Some riding boots. Size 4 riding boots.
15:06Anyone interested in buying a bike?
15:08It's a deal. It's a deal.
15:10Thank you very much. Cheers, fella. Thank you.
15:12Have a good day. Peace.
15:14He's got hunger in his eyes. Hunger in his eyes?
15:16Yeah, he wants the sale. I want the sale.
15:18Look at the hunger in the eyes. I want the sale.
15:20I don't know. I don't think so. You've got very hungry eyes.
15:23LAUGHTER
15:25I don't think so.
15:27OK, we'll make a deal. Three quid.
15:29Aw, thank you very much. Pleasure doing business with you.
15:33James and Yasmina are under orders from Ben
15:36to flog their three items directly to retailers.
15:41First up, a poster of Frank Lampard.
15:4440 quid and we've got a deal.
15:46I've got 35 in my pocket. I'll give it to you now.
15:4840 quid. Come on. I've come down from 80.
15:5040 quid. Yeah.
15:52Got it. All right. You've got a deal.
15:54Thank you very much, my man.
15:57Next, in a bucket of fast-melting ice,
16:00eight kilos of jelly deals.
16:02How much are you selling them for?
16:0450 quid.
16:06No, because we've got enough at the moment.
16:08But if you're in really trouble and you come back,
16:10I might decide to have them off you, if they're cheap.
16:13I tell you what, let's just do it.
16:15Well, potentially, if we could give them to you now,
16:17that's 30 quid for two bowls.
16:19Erm...
16:21They're fresh, in the back of our van.
16:2330 quid now, right?
16:25Amazing work. Thank you very much.
16:27Cheers, Ron.
16:29At last, we're getting somewhere.
16:31Yes.
16:33OK, now we need to do our damned hardest on this rug thing.
16:36Worth over £200,
16:38the Indian rug is the most valuable item on Sir Alan's list.
16:46Convinced it's just tat,
16:48Philip takes his to an East End street market.
16:53Right, let's go to a rug guy.
17:03Did we just say we didn't buy any rug?
17:05Sorry, no.
17:06Would you like to buy a rug?
17:08It's a beautiful rug, eight by eight.
17:10For who, darling?
17:11For your house, I don't know.
17:13What about yourself, sir?
17:15You haven't even asked him what it is.
17:19It doesn't go down much further, Philip.
17:23This must be one of the most stupid activities
17:27they have yet engaged in.
17:29I'm just wondering... Big rug.
17:31Can I buy a big rug?
17:33No?
17:37I've continually brought up the fact
17:39that we haven't valued the rug all day
17:41and the response has predominantly been
17:43it's a piece of shite.
17:45So I'm pretty confused about whether it's a gem
17:47or whether it's a piece of shite.
17:49I think we need to go somewhere where it's quite high-end.
17:52Hammersmith and Fulham.
17:54What do you think?
18:03Basically, I've got a polymer skeleton that I want to sell.
18:08It is pristine condition.
18:11It's in sort of an off-whiting colour.
18:13Would you be interested?
18:15Norrell's found a taker for the skeleton.
18:17Cheers. Thank you.
18:19Norrell, I'm so impressed by you being able to get a meeting for the skeleton.
18:22Even in death, he's got a meeting.
18:24And there is a price that he's willing to pay, at least.
18:27Norrell? What?
18:29The skeleton's lost his head.
18:31Just get the whole torso out.
18:33Oh, no, it's OK. It just slots in.
18:35Norrell's even checked its value.
18:37Over £150.
18:41I'm Deborah. It's nice to meet you.
18:43Hi. What do you think?
18:46It is in the market condition. It's brand-new.
18:50Would you be interested?
18:52Well, I'm a student. I haven't got a lot of money.
18:55Would you be interested in giving me a good price?
18:58As a purchase, we would purchase that somewhere around about £159, £99 plus VAT.
19:04I'm a student. I really... This is what you come to when you come to a student club.
19:07What's the best price that you can...?
19:10£50, really. I mean...
19:12OK, well...
19:18I think we agreed that £50's going to be a bit low,
19:21and we appreciate that you're a student cos I was only a student over a year ago.
19:25You know, it's spring-loaded on the jaw and stuff like that.
19:28Can I...? Right, I'll tell you what. Can we do it at £60?
19:31Will we do it at £60? Deal done at £60. OK.
19:34Have you got the cash on you? I can go and get it.
19:41OK, it's all there. Thank you very much.
19:43Thanks for doing business with us.
19:463.15pm.
19:51Over there, Afghan carpets, Persian.
19:54Yasmina and James try North London's rug shops.
19:58The design is OK, but the price is very high. I can't sell it.
20:01OK, well, thank you. Don't waste your time in this area.
20:04Nobody's going to buy it.
20:08Edward Road carpets. We need to get out.
20:10It's quite a nice rug. Yeah. It's huge.
20:13How does that fit in your price range at the moment?
20:16This rug here for this store, I think it's just a bit too expensive.
20:19Another dead end.
20:29Still stuck with his rug...
20:32..Philip's off to Horkett, door to door.
20:36Let's see what we can do down there. OK.
20:38Ten minutes down the road, we've got nothing to lose.
20:40And then we'll just go for broke.
20:46Absolutely not. There's not something you need. That's fine.
20:49Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much.
20:52£60 and it's yours. No, I don't need it, really.
20:55You don't need it? No problem.
20:57Thank you for your time. Bye.
20:59Bye-bye. Bye.
21:03I'm speechless.
21:05That rug was the most expensive item that they had.
21:08They've completely ignored its true value,
21:10apart from the rain, all day.
21:12And now they'll be lucky if they get £10 for it the way they're going on.
21:16MUSIC PLAYS
21:26Two hours to go.
21:29With five items left to sell, Ben can't find a taker for the commode.
21:36Try and sell it as a vintage accessory,
21:38as opposed to actually what it is.
21:40That's the chair that you shit in.
21:42It's not exactly very pleasant, is it?
21:45Hi, nice to meet you. Neural. Pleased to meet you.
21:48Spot you on the phone. Yeah, hi.
21:50Well, I'm not really interested, thank you.
21:54Based on what?
21:56Difficult to sell. I haven't got any clients for those sorts of chairs.
21:59If you were to buy it...
22:01I must say, it's very unusual to have three smartly-dressed people
22:04asking me if I want to buy a commode chair.
22:06If we can't shift it up there,
22:08will you agree to take it off us for a fiver?
22:10I'll give you a fiver to go away
22:12if you can't get £6 off them.
22:14OK. Thank you very much.
22:18I don't know if I'd be able to meet your valuation, to be honest.
22:21Thank you very much. Thank you.
22:23Do you think we should try and offer him money to take it?
22:26No. Bollocks!
22:31PHONE RINGS
22:33Hi, Ben. Hi there.
22:35Ben calls for reinforcements.
22:38Get rid of the rug and then come over to the market, OK?
22:41But I don't think we're going to have time to meet up with you guys.
22:44So do you not think you'll sell that rug in the next two hours?
22:47I reckon we should just stick to the plan that we've got,
22:49and if we get rid of it, then obviously we're going to come and help you out.
22:52They're just trying to get out of this. What?
22:54Let's all just work together on this, then,
22:56and you try and sell what you sell, we'll try and sell what we sell,
22:59and whoever has extra time will sell whatever's left, yeah?
23:01Sounds like a good idea. Right. OK. We'll see you soon, guys.
23:04All right. See you in a bit. Bye. Bye.
23:06She's just a bit destructive, isn't she?
23:09Her tone of voice suggests that we're sitting around doing nothing.
23:12No, no.
23:14How is that other team only selling bloody eels and a Frank Lampard thing?
23:20It's not going to take two hours to sell a rug.
23:22They just don't want to come and meet us and take the responsibility
23:24of trying to help us sell the rest of the stuff.
23:26They're just doing what they want, dotting around London
23:28and going to six different locations that are all...
23:30No, no, right, I'm not going to have any complaining in the team.
23:3555 minutes to go.
23:39Greenwich Market.
23:41That's what we're going to do, we're going to sell our bloody hearts out now.
23:45After lugging them round all day,
23:47it's Ben's last chance to offload his remaining five items.
23:51We're just a sundry lot for a quid of crap.
23:55Including the vintage shoes worth over £100.
23:59They're old.
24:00Who the frick will buy dirty monkey shoes like that?
24:02I think what we can try and do is find some absolute nutcase
24:04and sell it all to them for a quid.
24:09They're treating the whole thing as a sort of a flog off, really.
24:12Will any of you take them off me for a pound? All the shoes?
24:16I think it's about time to start getting a grip on this.
24:19Ben, if you'd be so kind,
24:21otherwise you're going to start panicking and with just cause.
24:24What are you feeling? 20.
24:2620 and we'll do the dogs for 20? Yeah.
24:29Shall we try and blag some of this stuff over there?
24:31I think Ben is starting to panic a little bit.
24:34This is crap.
24:37Shit.
24:38I think we've bought too much products on ourselves.
24:41The fact that the other team had three items and we took on the rest seven.
24:45Yeah, it should have been maybe a 6-4 split at least.
24:50It's a pain in the arse.
24:52Go round, go round, go round.
25:00MUSIC STOPS
25:0535 minutes to go.
25:08Philip has still got his rug.
25:11Lorraine, if we get to find out if we can go in that pub
25:14and stand outside the station for a couple of minutes...
25:17And then the station? OK, let's go.
25:19Nothing particularly good. I can't shift the rug.
25:22I can't believe I can't sell a rug. It's just...
25:26We're stuck with it, unfortunately, I think.
25:28We've got about half an hour to try and shift it,
25:30but I think we're dead in the water.
25:32I'd suggest we start walking back and just keep our eyes peeled.
25:37Just keep your eyes peeled, James, yeah? Yeah.
25:39You do that side, I'll do this side.
25:42And Yasmina has still got hers.
25:45We got given it and we need to sell it for as much money as we possibly can.
25:49I haven't got the clientele to buy it.
25:55Do you know what? Yes, hold that. I'm going to go and run up there.
25:58All right.
26:04Those two lads did say there was one up there.
26:06It doesn't matter.
26:08Oh, I hate this carpet.
26:17Look, what about that? What's that?
26:19What is that? I mean, would you be able to sell this?
26:22Would you have a customer be interested at some point? Yes.
26:25Yes? So it would be worth something to you?
26:28Yeah. Possibly. It would be worth...
26:30How much did you say?
26:32£50.
26:34We just stretch as far as 55 when you throw in a free bag.
26:37Personally.
26:3955. It's a good bargain for you.
26:4255. OK.
26:44OK. All right, thank you, Mama. Thank you very much.
26:46You're welcome.
26:53We're going to be late getting back, and I'll have to be careful.
26:56Look, just get back into the car and, you know...
27:00Excuse me, sir, would you be interested in buying a rug?
27:03How much? To you, I'll give you £100.
27:06What colour is it? Blue?
27:08No, it's got beautiful reds and ochres, all the business.
27:11What is this, some sort of joke?
27:13No, it's a real deal. I just need to sell this to you right now.
27:15You want 50?
27:17Make it 80. 70 quid. I need to get it going right now.
27:20It's a pretty warm blue.
27:2250 quid. 50 quid and you can pretend it's blue.
27:24There's blue in there, though.
27:26Go on, 50 quid and you can pretend it's blue for that price.
27:29I'll take it because I can see it's brand new.
27:32Yeah, that's it. Brand new.
27:34It's in good condition and I can live with the colour.
27:36Well done. As long as I don't drink too much.
27:38Let's shake on it, buddy. Let's shake on it.
27:40Cheers, man. You're a good man.
27:42An Englishman's word is bond. That's it.
27:44Ooh! Thank you. OK.
27:51That was the gem.
27:53What are you doing?
27:55That was the gem in the pack.
27:57Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah.
28:06Shot of the rugs, it's back to the boardroom.
28:09I must be honest, for me,
28:11I thought the rug and the shoes were an attraction.
28:14I don't know, somebody told me about that rug.
28:16Ah, right. It's true.
28:18I did actually say it very early on this morning.
28:20You never feel the disappointment.
28:22You turn around now after you know how tough it's been.
28:24You've hardly mentioned the rug all day.
28:26We've equally tried to sell it just as hard
28:28and now all of a sudden you realise it.
28:30Maybe that was the one and you go,
28:32yes, well, I said that from day one.
28:34What I would have said, Lorraine, was,
28:36I think we missed a trick on that rug.
28:38I think we missed a trick on that rug.
28:40That's all I said.
28:42That's all I said.
28:44That's all I said.
29:11So, Alan, we'll see you now.
29:32Good afternoon.
29:34Good afternoon, Alan.
29:38A very interesting task.
29:40Not, as some of you may have thought, to do with selling,
29:43but more to do with valuation.
29:45There is some devil in the detail there
29:47because some of those products were worth more than what you thought.
29:51A bit like me, really.
29:53Not much to look at, but worth quite a bit.
29:57OK, Ben, good team leader?
30:00Yeah, I did a good job.
30:02You can nod your head, it's OK.
30:04The skeleton's gone.
30:06Thank God.
30:08Tell me how you went about your valuation process.
30:10What actually happened is most people were naturally drawn
30:13towards items of interest to them.
30:15For example, this lad went straight for the football,
30:17this guy went straight for the skeleton,
30:19I went straight for the fish, and Ben ended up at the...
30:22Commode?
30:24Actually, he did.
30:26I did. I discovered that it was a commode.
30:30Tired today? I'm absolutely exhausted, yeah.
30:33Oh, never mind.
30:35Do I get the feeling that you didn't like this task?
30:38Was it too tough for you?
30:40Too challenging?
30:42I have to say it's probably the hardest task we've come up against yet.
30:45Well, I did tell you they get harder.
30:47You've got to start using your brains a little bit.
30:49Yeah, well, I was prepared for whatever task you were going to throw at me.
30:52It was one of those days that was actually quite stressful
30:55and things weren't going our way all the time.
30:57We weren't getting the sales out.
30:59OK, Ignite, good team leader?
31:02Yes.
31:04Good team leader, Lorraine?
31:06Yeah, he was quite good, yeah.
31:08Got your differences sorted out from last week, then, yeah?
31:11Totally, totally professional, completely moved on.
31:13Tell me about how you went about valuing things.
31:16What we did initially was we did have a book there
31:18and we had a quick whizz through it.
31:20You had a what there?
31:22It was an antique book with a guy that was...
31:24I'm having difficulty in understanding your Durham accent.
31:26Sorry. You slowed down a little bit.
31:28Anybody else do a bit of evaluation at all?
31:30I looked at the rug
31:32and it was kind of shouted out at the park
31:34that it was kind of a rubbish item.
31:36Did you relay that to your team?
31:38I did, yeah. And what did your team say?
31:40I have to be honest, I was really aware in this task
31:42of not upsetting everybody from my previous task.
31:45You know, I'm trying to be diplomatic.
31:47But in your previous task, it turned out right, didn't you?
31:49Yes, but I am very aware
31:51that I don't want to come across as a troublemaker in the team.
31:53I mean, I don't know. I mean, I've got great instinct, you know.
31:56I think a lot of what I say is disregarded, I have to say.
31:58I think you're the Cassandra of the team, frankly.
32:01OK, do you know what that means?
32:05You get it right and nobody else listens.
32:07They don't believe you.
32:09Yeah.
32:10Listen, don't get intimidated, Lorraine, right?
32:13No.
32:14I want to know why you didn't take any notice of her.
32:18To be honest, I didn't think the rug was particularly attractive.
32:21I think it would have been very difficult to shift.
32:23But you're not an expert. I'm not an expert, Sir Alan Bush.
32:25But she'd come up with it, she'd sussed it out.
32:27Why didn't you take any notice?
32:29In my personal opinion, yep, maybe I thought I knew better
32:31and I didn't think it'd be worth it.
32:33What I'm hearing here is one of your team members
32:35has actually come up with something
32:37and no-one's taken any notice.
32:43I'll just restate to you that it was up to you
32:45to find out what the individual items were worth.
32:48And the way I'm judging this, really,
32:50is going to look at what you sold them for
32:53compared to what they're worth.
32:55And that will come out with either a profit or a loss.
33:00Margaret.
33:01Well, Ignite sold some items for more than their value
33:04and on those they made a profit of £96.
33:08But they undersold two items, most notably the rug,
33:12so their final result was a net loss of £34.
33:17Nick, same thing for Empire.
33:19Rather a different story for Ben's team.
33:21They made a profit on some items, totaling £78,
33:25and a loss of £242,
33:28giving a thumping net loss of £169.
33:35Philip, as far as you lot are concerned, you've won.
33:41I don't know what you're smiling for. A loss is a loss.
33:46Philip, I really do hope that you are signing on
33:50to what I'm trying to say to you
33:52because your mind seems like concrete to me,
33:55like thoroughly mixed but set in its ways.
33:57I think I went along with it since last time,
33:59so I took out on board what you said.
34:01It's not what Margaret thinks.
34:03Anyway, you're going to go a long way now because your treat,
34:06you may have trouble identifying this,
34:08because your treat is truffle tasting.
34:11And that's not chocolates, as you know.
34:13Off you go.
34:23They're talking truffles.
34:28Right, you go off, come back here.
34:32You might need that bleeding commode.
34:35One of you is going to get fired.
34:52Two big nights.
34:54To the jelly deals.
34:56Cassandra!
35:01Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.
35:03If you would like to take your seats at the table,
35:05your meal is about to be served.
35:13Oh, wow, truffle plops down.
35:15I've always wanted this to happen to me.
35:17I've always wanted this to happen to me.
35:19I'm going to lift it off.
35:21I've always wanted this to happen.
35:25Oh, wow.
35:27That is the nicest cut of beef.
35:30There must be quite a difference between cheap wine and that,
35:33because that is just, like, really smooth.
35:36Cheers.
35:38I think no-one deserves this more than Lorraine for putting up with...
35:41Cassandra. ..another day of me.
35:43Cassandra.
35:45Cassandra.
35:56Well, one thing I'm going to say before we get into this
35:59is I don't want everybody saluting each other.
36:02No.
36:03Everybody knows I put up the biggest scrap in the boardroom.
36:06I've absolutely no problem in doing that again today,
36:09and I have absolutely no intention of going home today.
36:13I'll be very interested to see where Sir Alan points us to apportion blame,
36:17because, you know, there's a couple of things that might come up
36:22that I can think of, but other than that...
36:25About what?
36:27Well, we'll just see what he says, you know?
36:29I don't know who should be fired, but it's not going to be me.
36:44MUSIC CONTINUES
36:57Sir Alan's ready for you now.
37:13MUSIC STOPS
37:22Let's recap what this task is about.
37:26First of all, anybody with half a brain cell
37:29would think to themselves,
37:31let's sit down and work out definitively where the gems are,
37:35and when we've identified what the gems are in this pile of stuff,
37:39let's put all our efforts onto selling them.
37:42Why didn't that happen?
37:47You're all looking at me dumbfounded.
37:49Anybody got to say anything about that?
37:51Did you understand what it was about?
37:53Yes, sir.
37:54So, therefore, you understand that the reason you lost
37:57is because the items you did sell that you were supposed to have valued,
38:01you sold them tremendously under the cost.
38:03Ben, do you think it was a good idea just to sell at any price
38:06rather than not sell it at all?
38:08At one point, yeah, I was just thinking, you know,
38:11we don't want to become homestuck,
38:13and I thought better to at least have offloaded it,
38:16and that's sort of the route that we went on.
38:18The fact here is that you've all miserably failed
38:21in identifying the price of the product,
38:24and I think you got defocused and went off the rail
38:27and thought that it was most important to sell them at any price.
38:33You never thought I was going to be jumping up and down here
38:36if you came back and they were all sold.
38:38You valued the skeleton, right? Yeah.
38:41I tell you what, the bleeding skeleton could have done a better job
38:44than the lot of you.
38:45You got it valued at the right price.
38:47What do you sell it for at that ridiculous price?
38:50It probably wasn't good at all until Ben stepped in and closed the deal.
38:54But I disagree with the fact that you say that Ben closed the deal.
38:57I'm sure of it. I was in conversation with...
38:59Well, who closed the deal? You or him?
39:01I was in conversation with... Ben, who closed the deal? You or him?
39:04I said, would you take 60 quid? I just stepped in to get the job done.
39:07The money did exchange in my hands.
39:09Well, maybe it did, but he closed the deal.
39:11What was you, the cashier?
39:12Well, no, the fact that we didn't have a clear strategy to say,
39:15right, it's going to go for that price, nothing less than that.
39:18It was a case of get rid of it as much as it's worth.
39:21Well, who said it's a case of get rid of it as much as it's worth?
39:24You know, that came from the team leader.
39:26They're kind of pointing the finger at you then, really.
39:30Deborah, what on earth went wrong in this task?
39:33I think it was the fact that there was ten items
39:36and we had seven in our van and the other sub-team had three.
39:39It would have made everyone's life easier if we had 50% each way.
39:42Everyone would have had more time to identify
39:44what was actually valuable and what was not.
39:46That's my personal opinion on yesterday.
39:48And I think Ben's slightly naive to the fact that he gave himself
39:51a very, very big mountain to climb
39:53and maybe gave you guys a slightly small mountain to climb.
39:56OK, you're making the same point over and over again.
39:58Now, what I would say, Deborah, is that I wasn't in your team, OK,
40:01so I don't know what I would have done had I realised
40:03that perhaps you had more goods than we did, right?
40:05But you knew. But I don't know what I'd have done in your position.
40:08Hopefully, I'd like to think that I would have got on
40:10with valuing those goods and selling them as best I could
40:12rather than causing negativity between the three of you.
40:14With all due respect, I sold more than anyone on this team.
40:17So don't take that as a personal insult,
40:19but I sold more than you and James combined for the whole day.
40:22I think you're proving to Serana now that you're quite selfish
40:24within the group, Deborah.
40:25I didn't cause any rift in my group at all.
40:27That's because I didn't let you.
40:29Well, Ben, that's your take on it.
40:31I sold more than you and James combined for the whole day, OK?
40:34No, I think that Ben was involved in the books.
40:37How can you say that when I called in the morning
40:39and picked the buyer, told him where to go...
40:41And when the deal is done. Was Ben there?
40:43Ben wasn't even... Was Ben there?
40:45He was next to me. He didn't say a word about the price
40:47on the James Bond book.
40:48I opened the discussion on the James Bond book
40:50whilst I was mid-discussion.
40:52Would it be reasonable for you to claim some of the credit
40:54for those sales? I think it would be reasonable.
40:56Nick, how can you say that? How can you say that?
40:58Because she closed the deal, why not?
41:00She just got stuck right in while I was mid-speech.
41:02You got stuck right in and sold it, Ben.
41:04Don't tear around and say I didn't because it's a fact and I did.
41:07I sold 130 quid that day, mate,
41:09and your other sub-team only sold 130 between them,
41:11so don't you dare come and attack me when I did what you asked me to do.
41:14Hold on a second. We were talking about that.
41:16You left it in a box and didn't even look at it.
41:18You didn't call any book antique dealers to identify its value.
41:21Can you not try to...
41:22No, because, Ben, you were trying to claim glory for something.
41:25You didn't even bloody look at it. I'm not trying to claim glory.
41:28I'm just agreeing with the point that Nick made.
41:30It's closing the deal that matters.
41:32You can't turn around and say to me the work I did investigating the books
41:35didn't end up paying off in finance.
41:37Excuse me, excuse me, excuse me. You find another way to express yourself.
41:41Stop talking to him like he's a second-class citizen, OK?
41:44I don't mean to. Do you understand? Do you understand me?
41:47Yes. Yeah. You talk to me and get your points over to me.
41:50Don't talk to him in that manner.
41:52Am I clear? Yeah.
41:54What about you, James? What have you got to say?
41:56Are you sitting there keeping quiet?
41:59No, I'm not.
42:00You're thinking that the least you say, the least trouble you'll get.
42:03Between myself and Yasmin, I think we did a good job...
42:06You did what you was asked to do.
42:08Did you find out whether they had seven items to sell and you got three?
42:11You must have realised that.
42:12We knew that before, and that's what I said earlier.
42:14Were you phoning up, asking if we could help out or anything like that?
42:17No.
42:18We rung to see how things were going, but we did actually...
42:20Strategically, what we did is cross paths all day
42:22with products that you could have had and been selling along the way
42:25and products that we could have had.
42:28We'll mirror it so we can see what you've come up with.
42:30Ben, Ben, who are you bringing back into this boardroom?
42:38I think that, you know, when you look at who's going to get fired,
42:41you always consider the bigger picture
42:43and how people have performed throughout the entire competition.
42:46So when I do bring...
42:47Listen, excuse me, isn't that my position to judge that?
42:50I'll pick up on people of how they've performed so far in this six weeks, yeah?
42:54Yes, sir.
42:55This task failed, why and who's responsible?
42:59OK, sir. Yeah.
43:05I think I'm going to bring back...
43:09..Neural.
43:10And I think I'm also going to bring back...
43:15..James.
43:16James?! What?!
43:18Sorry.
43:19And I'm thinking, because I don't know exactly what he contributed,
43:23then again, I'm also touring between James and Deborah,
43:26and I think...
43:28So, why are you bringing me back?
43:30You can bring me in, mate, because I'm well up for it.
43:32You can take me in here if you want and we can see and explain about this task.
43:35Hold on a second. Why are you picking on him for?
43:38I'm going to bring Deborah. Go for it.
43:40I'm going to bring Neural and Deborah.
43:42I was struggling to identify exactly what James had done.
43:45I hope you're bringing in people for the right reasons, you know?
43:48No, no, certainly not, sir.
43:49I've been thinking, like, you know, about James,
43:51like there might be a village missing an idiot somewhere,
43:54and that's why you're bringing him in.
43:56Certainly not. I was just, at that very moment in time,
43:59I was struggling to think of exactly what he'd done during the day.
44:02Who are you bringing in? I'm bringing in Neural and Deborah.
44:05Right. You two, go back to the penthouse, OK?
44:11Bizarre.
44:13Going to bring in James, now you're going to bring in Deborah, you know?
44:17It's a very hard decision to make, sir, Alan. Yeah.
44:20And I think you better have good reasons to why you brought me in.
44:23Well, hold on, hold on. You've got time enough to explain that.
44:27So go and wait out there, and I'll be calling you back shortly
44:30where one of you will get fired.
44:41He was subdued from the start of the day,
44:44and it lasted all day.
44:46Big surprise for me. He'd lost all his fighting spirit.
44:49This is the chap that got a scholarship to Santa's for his leadership qualities.
44:53He didn't actually go there, though, did he? Well, no.
44:59The two things that let them down were the bike sale and the skeleton sale.
45:03Absolutely. Look who's responsible for that.
45:07Hello? OK, send the three of them in, please.
45:12Sir Alan's ready for you now.
45:15Ben, you started off firing on all cylinders.
45:20To me, you look like a defeated man.
45:23You've got a very, very good sense of humour.
45:26I don't think you're going to do the job, do you?
45:29I'm sure you're not going to do the job, but you've got a lot of energy.
45:33You've got a lot of energy.
45:35You've got a lot of energy.
45:37You've got a lot of energy, Ben.
45:39You've got a lot of energy.
45:41on all cylinders. To me, you look like a defeated man today.
45:44I'm not a defeated man and I've no intention of going home today, Sir Alan. I actually
45:49have the potential to win this competition. I can win it. The man to the left of me I
45:53do not feel has those raw skills to win this competition.
45:57What do you judge us on?
45:58This lady to the right of me, I'm still speaking.
46:00Yeah, you're talking us up.
46:01Yes, could you just let me finish?
46:02No, no, no, no, no.
46:03When you managed your task, you made it complete.
46:04Hang on, this is not a task at the moment.
46:05I'm the only reason that you won it.
46:06I'm the boss of my task.
46:07Yeah, I'm the only reason.
46:08You weren't even in my task.
46:10You weren't even in my task.
46:11Be quiet, be quiet till I finish.
46:12You weren't even on my task.
46:13You were the only reason that you won it.
46:14I've only worked here three times.
46:15Yeah, and those three times you haven't shown me that you have the potential to win this
46:19competition.
46:20Show me, show me.
46:21Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on.
46:22One at a time.
46:23I will tell you why you brought me to this boardroom.
46:24No, no, no, just wait one second. You'll get your time, I promise you. Have you finished?
46:30Yes.
46:31Right, I'll tell you why you brought me to this boardroom. Because I had the balls, okay,
46:34when all five of us sat here, to say that this was a flaw strategy right from the start.
46:39The fact that we took on too many products. Nobody else spoke up. And I'll tell you why
46:42they didn't speak up. Because they're all sitting there shitting it, thinking, well,
46:46if I speak up against this, or if I said this is where we went wrong, potentially I could
46:49be in the bottom three. Was I responsible for the failure of this task? Was I?
46:53Neural, Neural, that's the point.
46:55Given that you were in my company along the way.
46:57Neural, I made it very clear what our strategy was going to be at that stage.
47:02Will you let me finish? Will you let me finish? Will you let me finish?
47:05And my strategy, my strategy was very clear. I've put my hands up.
47:09Can you honestly be quiet without being corrosive? Without, you know, getting people's nerves during the day?
47:15I'm just being honest.
47:16I think, I think, let's be honest. You thought the books were rubbish.
47:19Ben, Ben, Ben.
47:20We then went to chair and cross. We got the books sorted.
47:22Once you finish, let me know.
47:23Yeah, I will let you know.
47:24Okay, Ben.
47:25And on that, you were extremely rude to people.
47:26Ben, Ben. What do you want to say?
47:29Me?
47:30Yeah.
47:32Unfortunately, a shoddy project manager, you did not delegate to anybody.
47:35Well, was it, was there any need for you on the way home to start being corrosive?
47:38The reason...
47:39Corrosive? There's a difference between being corrosive and being honest, mate.
47:41No, even Yasmin pointed this out.
47:42There's a massive, massive difference.
47:43We're on our way, we're on our way back.
47:44I'm honest about the fact that you let a team go for 30% of the stock and left us with 70%.
47:48What's that got to do with it? It wouldn't have made any...
47:50It's got a massive amount to do with it.
47:51It wouldn't have made...
47:52Because you couldn't flip and get rid of it.
47:53No, it wouldn't have made any difference...
47:54It would have.
47:55...if they'd have had it or whether we had it.
47:57The task...
47:58In fact, you can't say that, it's a massive issue.
48:00Jesus, you two do a lot of shodding.
48:01Yeah, because you are.
48:02The task was lost...
48:03Because you are.
48:04The task was lost on cost or on pricing.
48:06Ben.
48:07All right, OK.
48:08Ben, Ben, Ben.
48:09Yes, sir?
48:10And I don't want any interruption from anyone else.
48:12You'll all get your time to speak.
48:14Why have you brought her into here?
48:16I think the reason I picked Deborah is that Deborah had been so rude about the book people
48:21that I actually had to take this into...
48:23I don't think it's a laughing matter, Angie.
48:25What did you call her when you left the bookshop?
48:27What did you call her when you left the bookshop?
48:29What did you call that woman when you left the bookshop?
48:31And what did you call book people all day, in front of me and Neural,
48:33just if you're going to go down that whole alleyway?
48:35What did you call her?
48:37I don't know what I called her.
48:38All right, well, I think me and Neural can guess what word.
48:40Ben, Ben.
48:41No, no, no.
48:42Ben, you're lying.
48:43You're faking something.
48:44I thought I was allowed to speak about this.
48:46OK, OK, OK, OK, OK.
48:48I want to know why you think, Neural,
48:51you are not responsible for the failure of this task.
48:55And the reason why...
48:56I'll tell you something, right?
48:57I'm worried about you.
48:59And I have been worried about you.
49:01I expressed it even in the task that your team won that time.
49:04I think you knew.
49:05You got some kind of body language from me that,
49:07although you won, I didn't think that you actually was the one
49:11that made the team win.
49:13And so why shouldn't I fire you then?
49:15Well, the fact that I sold three items.
49:17I sold the bike, I sold the children's book...
49:19You sold the two...
49:20..and I sold the skeleton.
49:21You sold the skeleton and the bike,
49:22lower than anybody else in this whole process.
49:25Ben didn't actually do anything.
49:27Do you think it's time for him to go?
49:28I do, I certainly do.
49:29You've seen that Ben is very volatile.
49:31The fact that he doesn't let anybody speak,
49:33he comes across as rude, he comes across as arrogant, OK?
49:35And that's the bottom line of Ben.
49:37I know, I have noticed that he talks down to so many people.
49:39I'm getting a rick in my neck looking at...
49:41I'm not, you know, my vocal cords aren't as loud as Ben,
49:43but I will know when to shut up,
49:45but I also know when to defend myself when I'm being lied to.
49:48Deborah, who do you think I should fire for this task?
49:50Part of me thinks Ben was an absolutely shoddy project manager,
49:54but I see him being able to lead a team of people.
49:56He just kind of crumbles,
49:58and everyone else has got to try and help him along the way,
50:00which then puts you in the firing line if you do bother to help him.
50:03OK. Ben, who should I fire, then?
50:06Neural.
50:07Your reason being?
50:09I think you've sat on the fence throughout the competition.
50:12What's he on to, to ask on?
50:13Don't ask a question if you're not going to let me answer it.
50:16I think you've sat on the fence throughout the competition.
50:19I think that I'm...
50:21Just let me finish.
50:23Just let me finish.
50:25Speak properly and justify your reasons.
50:27I'm justifying my reasons.
50:29Neural, you have sat on the...
50:31I asked him a question, Neural. Let him answer.
50:34Neural, I think you've sat on the fence throughout the competition.
50:37I think you've been a passenger in most tasks.
50:39I don't think you're particularly strong or round.
50:42You're getting round to doing my job for me again, Ben.
50:45I'm not interested in that.
50:47Sorry.
50:49Those are the main reasons that I think Neural should be fired.
50:52Ben, don't look too great for you.
50:55As the team leader, I'm going to afford you one more privilege, OK?
50:59Because, you know, word gets round quickly in this place here.
51:03There's a taxi driver outside already typing your address in his sat-nav.
51:06Why shouldn't I fire you?
51:08Sir Alan, I've got so much to offer you.
51:10I really have got the raw business talent to be your next apprentice.
51:14I've shown that I'm an absolute grafter.
51:17I've got grafter going down here, right? Grafter, yeah.
51:20Yeah, I'm a real grafter. I'll get my hands dirty.
51:23I've shown that I'm very good at sales.
51:25Sales, yeah.
51:27Yeah, I sold very well.
51:29I've shown that I'm a good team leader,
51:31even if this has been turned around on me now.
51:34Good team leader, yeah.
51:36And I'm really, really good at it.
51:38And I really do, I can win this competition, Sir Alan.
51:41Sir, can I just make one point?
51:43I think you also need to know,
51:46ever since we've been into the penthouse, OK,
51:48Ben, all you've done is talk about,
51:50ooh, I wonder what magazine deals I can do.
51:52No, I certainly haven't.
51:54That's a really unfair thing to bring out.
51:56A really unfair thing to bring out.
51:58Because I've always said throughout this process
52:00that fame is an unwanted by-product of this,
52:02and I've just made jokes about it.
52:04It's so annoying to hear.
52:06No, absolutely not.
52:08That maybe your interest lies in somewhere
52:10where maybe you can take your top off
52:12and show off for the rugby ball season.
52:15Those are the signs of a desperate man.
52:17Desperate? I'm being factual.
52:19OK, I don't want to hear from anybody else now,
52:22because I'm going to summarise,
52:24because I think I've heard enough.
52:28Ben, I'm worried you're a broken man.
52:31I'm not.
52:33I said I don't want to hear anything.
52:35I'm worried you're a broken man because of your age.
52:38I'm worried that you may have bit off more than you can chew.
52:45Laurel, with all due respect,
52:47I think you've been a bit lucky sometimes,
52:49and some of your colleagues in the Penthouse have stated
52:52and have actually been outraged by the fact
52:55that you weren't brought into the ballroom on many occasions
52:58when they were.
53:02It's been a difficult decision,
53:04and I take the last six weeks into account.
53:09Deborah, I cannot put up with someone with a mouth like yours.
53:13I certainly don't like the way that I've been told
53:16you speak to people as if you're something special.
53:19Trust me, love, you're not something special.
53:26But, Laurel, I don't know what you've been doing here,
53:30and I think you have escaped the radar.
53:32You're fired.
53:34Thanks for the opportunity.
53:43You ever open a mouth like that again,
53:46don't even bother to come back in this ballroom.
53:49You got me? Yes, darling.
53:51OK, off you go, back to the Penthouse.
53:55Well, I've got this feeling about Laurel, really.
53:58I didn't see much from him in the past six weeks.
54:01All I can say is that whoever employs him, better get a receipt.
54:09I don't know what to say.
54:11I've got this feeling about him.
54:13I don't know what to say.
54:15I've got this feeling about him.
54:17I don't know what to say.
54:19I don't know what to say.
54:21I've got this feeling about him.
54:24MUSIC PLAYS
54:43I certainly think it's just the wrong, did fire the wrong person.
54:46Ben is such a hothead.
54:48He lied throughout.
54:50The fact that I spoke out against him
54:53and that all fibre was in there,
54:55you know, probably was what led to my downfall.
55:01I think it's going to be a shock departure tonight.
55:04Who do you think it's going to be?
55:06So who is it going to be?
55:08Cassandra.
55:10She's Cassandra, guys.
55:12I think...
55:14I think Deborah will go.
55:16MUSIC PLAYS
55:20In reality, yeah, I think it could be Ben.
55:22Nah.
55:24Interesting, will they come in, then?
55:26This is the first time, well...
55:28None of us have known.
55:30And that's testament to how difficult the task was.
55:32Ben and Deborah!
55:40You come in here and you go on about,
55:42Armstrong, I can fight anyone,
55:45get rid of the weakest thing.
55:47What was it the other day?
55:49Put everyone out of their misery.
55:51It's a big fight.
55:53Blah, blah, blah.
55:55And in reality, you showed there
55:57that you were totally spineless
55:59and you've shat your pants.
56:01One job.
56:03Now nine candidates.