Thargor wrote: » Were any of the recent years series any good? I drifted away from it a few years ago, cant remember why, I always enjoyed it. Any recent series worth a download?
coL wrote: » The big difference I see in the programme over the last few years is that nobody seems to win* a task anymore so much as one team just doesn't lose as badly as the other!!! I would love to see a situation were the PMs from both teams get fired for being useless and/or all three who were brought back get fired, that would make it interesting again. * yes, I know there is technically a winner but sometimes the win is so poor its hardly counts as such
Dubliner Pamela Laird (29) is no stranger to success in the entrepreneurial world, given that she founded the successful Moxi Loves range in 2017, which is now stocked in Penneys. She confirmed the good news on her Instagram account yesterday, saying how she hoped she would have "the luck of the Irish" when it came to appearing on the hit BBC show. The glamorous entrepreneur, who started off learning the ropes at her mum's beauty salon in Terenure, described competing on the show as being the "most challenging experience of my life and by far the most fun". She will shortly be seen battling it out with 15 other hopefuls for the coveted €283,000 investment in their business idea, with the show airing on BBC October 2. Ms Laird, who hit headlines after turning down an investment offer on RTE's Dragon's Den, puts her success down to her "entrepreneurial gene". She describes herself as "feisty and passionate, with a charismatic personality", so she should be good at the sales tasks on the BBC show. Asked about her weaknesses, she said she can be impatient and demanding, while often finding it difficult to delegate tasks. "I love to be the underestimated person in the room," she added.
Thargor wrote: » Remember where they sent them to Marrakesh or somewhere on the treasure hunt and one of the challenges was to get some Hallal meat and nobody on the teams knew what that meant so they got a random butcher in the market to say a prayer over a lump of chicken or something and brought that back :P
Go Harvey Go wrote: » And, once again, no-one from outside England.
Go Harvey Go wrote: » Time for me to comment on the candidates again, I guess... Eight men and eight women. All aged between 19 and 36. All conventionally good-looking. Some of them black or of Asian descent. Most of them from the London, Manchester and Birmingham metropolitan areas. And, once again, no-one from outside England. I can certainly see why the Beeb and Mark Burnett wouldn't be inclined to select applicants aged 40 or over. Indeed, only two such applicants have been selected in the show's 15-year history - 41-year-old Jaz Ampaw-Farr in 2013 (who was first to be fired), and 47-year-old Ruth Whiteley in 2015 (who didn't get much further). But surely they wouldn't exclude someone simply because they're from Glasgow, Cardiff, Dublin, or anywhere else that is Not In England - even if they tick all the other boxes (aged under 40, conventionally good-looking, thinks they're a really good businessperson, not fazed at all by Sugar and his aides)? As I said last year, Ofcom would surely have to get involved if this was the case...
Deleted User wrote: » Some gorgeous female candidates.
Deleted User wrote: 2300 south African rand is 552 euros. Thats a hell of a lot for a one day wine tasting trip that doesn't include food.