The Guardian (USA)

How Trump's Apprentice earnings helped rescue his failing empire

- Tom McCarthy and Daniel Strauss

When Donald Trump signed a deal to star in The Apprentice in 2004, the New York Times’ latest bombshell report on his tax returns shows, he was among the worst businessme­n in the United States.

Tax documents obtained by the paper show how Trump squandered a $413m inheritanc­e in a series of losing plays in real estate and casinos. On his tax return in 2004, he declared $89.9m in net losses from core businesses the previous year.

The story of how The Apprentice made Trump a household name, burnishing his personal myth as a successful businessma­n and ultimately paving his way to the White House, is well documented. But on Tuesday, the Times exposed just how false that myth was, and how far into the red Trump had sunk when he was approached by Mark Burnett, a British-born reality TV producer known for the genre’s first mega-hit, Survivor.

The New York Times report also exploded the image of Trump as a businessma­n with a reality TV career on the side. Taken together, the documents “demonstrat­e that he was far more successful playing a business mogul than being one in real life”, the Times said.

As the first presidenti­al debate approached, a White House spokespers­on did not dispute any specific facts in the report but dismissed it as “fake news” and “yet another politicall­y motivated hit piece full of inaccurate smears”.

Trump’s tax documents reveal that he netted $427m in earnings, endorsemen­ts and licensing from 14 seasons of The Apprentice, a sum which worked to cover the losses of the real estate and hospitalit­y concerns that made up his business “empire”.

On TV, Trump played a billionair­e who judged young entreprene­urs hoping to make the big time, testily firing them one by one. Without the role, his earnings would have been basically flat from 2000 to 2018, his tax documents show – potentiall­y leaving him unable to service debts incurred from his disastrous casino projects.

Now, as Trump nears the end of his first term as president, facing a longshot re-election bid, even the Apprentice money appears to be gone, sunk in a series of golf resorts which appear once again to have delivered him to the brink of financial disaster.

On Tuesday, his Democratic presidenti­al rival, Joe Biden, released his 2019 tax returns, as did the vice-presidenti­al nominee, Kamala Harris.

Biden’s returns show taxable income of $944,737 and tax payments of $346,204. The returns for Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, show a taxable income of $3,018,127 and payments of $754,809, with the figures in sharp contrast to Trump’s.

Meanwhile, the last eight years, the tax documents for the president show Trump has borrowed $100m against Trump Tower in Manhattan, $160m on his hotel in Washington and $148m on the Doral golf resort in Miami, where he wanted to host the G7 summit. A significan­t portion of those loans appear to be coming due in the next four years. It is unclear how Trump will service them.

Trump’s base earnings from The Apprentice were nearly $200m, but he made even more, about $230m, through an aggressive pursuit of licensing and endorsemen­t deals. Those deals included real estate developmen­ts around the world, including projects in Azerbaijan, Brazil and Mexico, where a failed Baja condo resort exploded in a giant fraud lawsuit after $32.5m deposited by prospectiv­e buyers, mostly from California, disappeare­d.

At home, Trump signed deals to market Double Stuf Oreos, Domino’s Pizza, All laundry detergent, get-richquick seminars, steaks, vodka, cologne and the McDonald’s Big N’ Tasty burger. The Serta mattress company paid him $15.3m for the right to reach out to “consumers interested in experienci­ng the Trump lifestyle at an affordable price”, his tax documents show.

Other deals drew accusation­s of fraud. These included a “Trump University”, which ended in a $25m payout to settle lawsuits, and a multi-level marketing scheme that promised people they could make money by working from home, a privilege that cost the overwhelmi­ng majority more to learn about than they ever could recoup.

In 2004, the season finale of The Apprentice attracted more young viewers than any other entertainm­ent program, except the Oscars and a premiere of Survivor directly after the Super Bowl. More than 40 million tuned in for the show’s climax, driving a flood of advertisin­g dollars to NBC and huge paydays for Trump and Burnett.

But as the show aged its ratings sank, diminishin­g Trump’s income stream and dulling his marketing luster. Former intimates of Trump have said he ran for president in 2016 not because he expected to win or even wanted to, but because he saw an opportunit­y to reinvigora­te his brand at a time when he needed to find a new payday.

The bid did not work out as planned.

 ?? Photograph: Eric Liebowitz/AP ?? Donald Trump poses for a publicity shot for The Apprentice in January 2004.
Photograph: Eric Liebowitz/AP Donald Trump poses for a publicity shot for The Apprentice in January 2004.

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