Former “Apprentice” Contestants Say Donald Trump Has Never Cared About People Of Color.
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“The idea that you can establish some measure of credibility
with three months before
the presidential election? … Anyone who has had any interaction with people of color would
know better.”
the presidential election? … Anyone who has had any interaction with people of color would
know better.”
Lately, Donald Trump has been focusing his presidential campaign on appealing to black voters.
But four contestants who appeared on the Republican nominee’s former reality show
The Apprentice had experiences with Trump that they saw as reflective of his dearth
of cultural sensitivity and ignorance of black issues.
In interviews with BuzzFeed News, Kevin Allen, Tara Dowdell, Kwame Jackson, and
Randal Pinkett, black Americans who have previously denounced the presidential hopeful,
said that Trump’s treatment of people of color on the show appeared unequal compared
to his conduct toward white contestants.
When Pinkett was crowned victor of The Apprentice Season 4 in 2005, Trump asked him
to share the title with the runner-up. In the end, Pinkett refused, prompting some backlash.
“There were lots of people who said, ‘Well, why didn’t you share it? Why didn’t you do the
magnanimous thing?’ And my response is … ‘Why did he ask me, of all candidates, to share
the title with the runner-up?’” he told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. In the 10-year
history of the show, Trump never asked another winner to share the title with someone else.
And though Pinkett personally asked Trump about the controversial move, he said he was never
given much in the way of a direct answer: Pinkett said Trump told him he thought the move would
be “good for the watercooler, for people to talk about the next day.”
“I can only interpret his behavior under one of two theories: the first, that he’s racially insensitive …
or that he did it to try to discredit me and that he didn’t really want to see an African-American
be the sole and only winner,” Pinkett said.
Allen, a final-four contestant on The Apprentice Season 2, was memorably required to sell
chocolate bars outside subway stops in Manhattan as one of the challenges on the show. “You’re an unbelievably talented guy in terms of education,” Trump said during Allen’s firing. He told
BuzzFeed News in a recent phone interview he was eliminated for being “overeducated,” while the contestant who ultimately won the show [Kelly Perdew] “had the exact same education” as him.
“While I was on the show, there were a lot of things that happened that were odd and I think would
not have happened had I not been an African-American,” Allen said. He noted that his “worst moment” came when the cast and producers were walking back to Trump Tower after filming late into the night. “[Trump’s] security officers pulled me out of the group and said I was trying to get into Trump Towers without authorization,” Allen said. “I’m the only African-American male on the show, and you would think that they would know that. I don’t know why that happened, but it was one of those instances that
kind of remind you that you’re an African-American and some people think differently of you.”
“He’s someone who believes minorities are these sort of outliers.”
But Trump’s eyebrow-raising conduct did not deter black audiences from tuning in for The Celebrity Apprentice, which is what The Apprentice transformed into in 2008. During the 2010-2011 run of the spinoff, several famous entertainers, including Lil Jon, NeNe Leakes, and Dionne Warwick, starred as contestants, which brought many black fans into The Apprentice fold. One episode in particular, which aired on May 4, 2011, drew a jaw-dropping 1.5 million black viewers.
But prior to the celebrity version of The Apprentice, the NBC show never graced the top 25 shows watched by black audiences, according to Nielsen Media Research.
Pinkett thought that Trump cast black performers on that particular fourth season of The Celebrity Apprentice — which also featured La Toya Jackson and Star Jones — not for the sake of inclusivity, but to harness the stars’ pull with audiences. “I don’t think he valued diversity on those shows; I think he valued the fact that they were celebrities,” he said, adding that he believes Trump maintains close friendships with certain prominent black figures for the same reason. “That’s why Mike Tyson is an exception to his rule. That’s why Don King is an exception to his rule. At one point, I was an exception to his rule, where he considers those individuals more ‘in his circle.’”
“When you find out this person has these types of views, and then they do you the disservice of trying to appeal to you but won’t even come speak at any of your organizations … then that’s a farce,” Jackson said.
Pinkett agreed. “The idea that you can establish some measure of credibility with three months before the presidential election by hiring surrogates and putting Omarosa in an outreach position and holding forums with everybody but people of color? … Anyone who has had any interaction with people of color would know better,” he said, adding that in the year he spent working at Trump Entertainment Resorts, he did not meet a single person of color in an executive role.
Trump’s campaign manager announced Sunday that the candidate plans to appear at events in black communities to address black voters’ interests, but the effort may be too little, too late, according to Pinkett.
“If you look at his [donations to philanthropic organizations], if you look at the lack of diversity of his organization, if you look at [his response to] the Central Park Five, if you look at his housing discrimination case, if you look at all these factors, it becomes very clear very quickly that Donald has never cared about minority communities.”
Representatives for Trump, Trump Productions, Mark Burnett (who created and produced both The Apprentice and The Celebrity Apprentice), and NBC did not immediately reply to BuzzFeed News’ request for comments on the contestants’ aforementioned experiences.
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