Arab Times

‘Celebrity Apprentice’ my show: Arnie

‘The other one was Trump’

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LOS ANGELES, Dec 30, (AP): In an epic mishmash of politics and celebrity, Donald Trump’s elevation from “Celebrity Apprentice” host to president-elect has created an opening for actor and former California Gov Arnold Schwarzene­gger to become a reality TV star.

To further complicate matters, Trump retains a producing stake in “The New Celebrity Apprentice.”

But Schwarzene­gger says viewers will find out who’s the boss when the revamped reality series debuts Monday on NBC with a two-hour episode (8-10 pm EST).

“The show is Arnold. The other one was Trump. I have a different personalit­y and I do everything kind of lightheart­ed,” said Schwarzene­gger, of bodybuildi­ng, “Terminator” movies and political fame. He served as governor from 2003-2011.

He was sanguine about whether the Trump connection, past or present, may dissuade some viewers from tuning in after the bitterly divisive presidenti­al election. (Schwarzene­gger, a moderate Republican, said in an October statement that he wouldn’t vote for Trump, calling it a choice of “your country over your party.”)

“People always like to associate themselves with a winner, and he won, so I think that’s a big plus for the show,” Schwarzene­gger said. Besides, he added, “I never concern myself over things I have no control over.”

“When we did the show, we didn’t do it thinking about, ‘Is Trump going to win? What does it mean he was the host of the show?’ None of it,” he said.

Contestant Laila Ali, boxing champ and daughter of the late Muhammad Ali, did consider whether some might vote against watching “Celebrity Apprentice” because of Trump.

Hoping

“It’s definitely something I thought about, and I’m hoping that doesn’t happen because it’s a whole new show. But I could definitely see certain people feeling that way,” she said. “We shot the show a long time ago (last February) and things weren’t where they are now.”

She hopes viewers will “take it for what it is,” entertainm­ent in which money won by its celebrity competitor­s goes to charity. In Ali’s case, that’s the Women’s Sports Foundation.

Other contenders include Boy George, Eric Dickerson, Vince Neil, Jon Lovitz, Carson Kressley, Carnie Wilson and Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi. Among the advisers: heavyweigh­ts Warren Buffett and Steve Ballmer.

For NBC, its long and ultimately fraught relationsh­ip with Trump has caused the network to tread carefully around his continued off-camera link to “The New Celebrity Apprentice.” NBC licenses the show from MGM, the studio that produces it.

In early 2015, while exploring a run for the GOP nomination, mogul Trump said he wouldn’t renew his “Apprentice” contract.

Several months later, NBC said it was cutting business ties with the then-presidenti­al candidate because of comments he made about Mexican immigrants while announcing his campaign. In dropping the annual Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants that had been a joint venture between NBC and Trump, the network said that “respect and dignity for all people are cornerston­es of our values.”

That didn’t stop NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” from bringing Trump on as a ratingsboo­sting host in November 2015.

Earlier this month, the network left it to “Apprentice” franchise creator Mark Burnett, now an executive with MGM, to confirm reports that Trump still had a stake in the series. The network has declined further comment.

Paul Telegdy, who oversees “Celebrity Apprentice” as president of NBC Entertainm­ent’s alternativ­e and reality group, said in a recent interview that it deserves to return after a nearly two-year absence.

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