Apprentice Betting
Apprentice Betting through Free Betting Online
It’s back, Siralun is back and the peerless insight into just what it takes to succeed in the cut-throat world of big business in 2009 is back.
Click here to visit our 2009 Apprentice Betting Odds Page
Yup, we’re of course referring to the inimitable BBC1 reality/soap/docu-drama that’s set to play out on our TV screens on Wednesday evenings for the next 12 weeks, namely the ratings-winning and free betting online favourite, The Apprentice.
Now in its fifth consecutive season, it will be interesting to see whether or not the current financial downturn impacts on the betting world to any noticeable degree on the trials and tribulations of the shy and retiring candidates desperate to get their corporate-clad foot on the first rung of Siralun’s business empire ladder. And subsequently entertain one and all as they repeatedly make fools of themselves with not just their dubious decision making but insistence on trotting out the most inane, pious personal mottos you could imagine whilst on their ‘journey’.
About the Apprentice Series
As usual the viewing audience will be party to Siralun’s scathing (yet deeply humourous) put-downs, Magaret Mountford’s Medusa-like fixed stare and Nick Hewer’s po-faced derision at any suggestion, as they run the rule over a gaggle of the biggest, most shameless self publicists you could ever have the abject misfortune of being served by at the Carphone Warehouse; or wherever else it is that these budding captains of industry have previously cut their teeth.
Expect to be enthralled, enlightened, possibly informed – not to mention left feeling slightly nauseas – as the suited and booted ‘contestants’ strive to out-perform one another through a series of rudimentary business gauntlets thrown down by Siralun to determine who’s got the mettle – and stomach – to succeed. And progressively see off the others week by week.
Boadroom battles make the Apprentice
Because let’s face it, that’s the best bit of the Apprentice. You soon tire of watching Siralun’s Rolls Royce and private jet shot from different angles, the oh-so-cool, 11,000sq ft city apartment the candidates are holed up in for the duration of the series and the perplexed look etched on the faces of Siralun’s trusted aides, Mountford and Hewer. But the infamous boardroom battles are what it’s all about and the reason millions of us tune in each week.
Successive back-stabbing, bad-mouthing and outright character assassinations will slowly whittle away the wheat from the chaff and leave us with a handful of hopefuls who have done just about whatever it takes (ethically or otherwise) to worm their often duplicitous ways in to the Amstrad boss’ affections and ultimately land the plummest role this side of the square mile.
Added spice to the Apprentice show
Other highlights of The Apprentice is the doubtless unearthing of an individual you just love to hate. Or in the case of 2008’s Raif Bjayou, desperately side-step the revelation that you like. Akin to a pantomime dame that they’re more often than not portrayed as courtesy of convenient editing, previous incarnations have included the likes of Syed Ahmed, Katie Hopkins and Ruth Badger, who inadvertently would rub all and sundry up the wrong way, yet secretly many people admired on some level or another.
Compulsive viewing it undoubtedly is, and will capture neither the hearts nor minds of the viewing public, yet will scratch away at a certain itch for this type of programme making that we all publicly admit to abstaining from yet behind closed doors are consumed by and with.

