Stewart's 'Apprentice' fired
'Apprentice' fired
Nov 14, 2005
It's a fade out for "The Apprentice: Martha Stewart" after next month's finale.
Sources said that NBC has passed on ordering another round of episodes of the Stewart-hosted edition of "The Apprentice" from Mark Burnett Prods. The spinoff has struggled for the peacock on Wednesday nights since its Sept. 21 premiere. A spokesman for NBC stressed Sunday that the show always had been scheduled to run for only one cycle.
NBC and "Apprentice" executive producer Burnett tapped Stewart to helm the spinoff in an effort to capitalize on public curiosity about the lifestyle maven after her release this year from a five-month prison term for lying to investigators in connection with an insider-trading stock probe. Plans for Stewart to host the spinoff were announced in February while Stewart was behind bars in West Virginia (HR 2/03).
Like the original "Apprentice" and its gregarious entrepreneur host Donald Trump, Stewart's version of the show set up a competition among 16 would-be executives to win a $250,000 prize and a year-long "apprenticeship" job at Stewart's Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia company. Stewart's panel of judges each week include Charles Koppelman, chairman of the board at MSLO, and her daughter, MSLO consultant Alexis Stewart.
While Trump's "Apprentice" was an instant hit last year on its debut, Stewart's opened with little sizzle, drawing just 7.1 million viewers and a 2.3 rating/7 share of the adults 18-49 demographic, according to Nielsen Media Research. For the season-to-date, the show has pulled in an average of 6.8 million viewers and a 2.6/6 in 18-49.
"Apprentice: Martha Stewart" opened the season for NBC in the Wednesday lead-off slot, then shifted to 9 p.m. in the line of fire of one of primetime's biggest hits, ABC's "Lost," as of Oct. 5. The show's two-hour live finale is set for Dec. 21.
Burnett and Stewart also are partnered with NBC Universal in a daytime syndicated strip, "Martha," that has delivered fair to middling ratings since its September premiere.
Sources said that NBC has passed on ordering another round of episodes of the Stewart-hosted edition of "The Apprentice" from Mark Burnett Prods. The spinoff has struggled for the peacock on Wednesday nights since its Sept. 21 premiere. A spokesman for NBC stressed Sunday that the show always had been scheduled to run for only one cycle.
NBC and "Apprentice" executive producer Burnett tapped Stewart to helm the spinoff in an effort to capitalize on public curiosity about the lifestyle maven after her release this year from a five-month prison term for lying to investigators in connection with an insider-trading stock probe. Plans for Stewart to host the spinoff were announced in February while Stewart was behind bars in West Virginia (HR 2/03).
Like the original "Apprentice" and its gregarious entrepreneur host Donald Trump, Stewart's version of the show set up a competition among 16 would-be executives to win a $250,000 prize and a year-long "apprenticeship" job at Stewart's Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia company. Stewart's panel of judges each week include Charles Koppelman, chairman of the board at MSLO, and her daughter, MSLO consultant Alexis Stewart.
While Trump's "Apprentice" was an instant hit last year on its debut, Stewart's opened with little sizzle, drawing just 7.1 million viewers and a 2.3 rating/7 share of the adults 18-49 demographic, according to Nielsen Media Research. For the season-to-date, the show has pulled in an average of 6.8 million viewers and a 2.6/6 in 18-49.
"Apprentice: Martha Stewart" opened the season for NBC in the Wednesday lead-off slot, then shifted to 9 p.m. in the line of fire of one of primetime's biggest hits, ABC's "Lost," as of Oct. 5. The show's two-hour live finale is set for Dec. 21.
Burnett and Stewart also are partnered with NBC Universal in a daytime syndicated strip, "Martha," that has delivered fair to middling ratings since its September premiere.
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