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The Apprentice: Sir Alan opts for fibber over favourite

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Published Date: 12 June 2008
THE son of a milkman who lied on his CV confounded the bookies last night by winning The Apprentice.
Lee McQueen, 30, a former recruitment sales manager, won the £100,000-a-year job with Sir Alan Sugar, despite being caught stretching the truth about his education in an earlier episode.

The tycoon picked Mr McQueen over hot favourite Claire Young and the two other contenders, regional sales manager Alex Wotherspoon and global pricing leader Helene Speight, to launch a digital advertising product.

The finale of series four of the ratings-winning programme saw the four contestants tasked with designing and manufacturing a new fragrance for men in just one week.

The showdown split them into two competing teams and tested their creative, strategic and presentation skills in front of an audience of industry experts including Givenchy and Estee Lauder.

Last night, Sir Alan praised all of the finalists. He said it was a difficult decision to pick the winner, but he had been "very, very convinced" by Mr McQueen.

Of the new Apprentice's job, Sir Alan said: "There is definitely a great job there.

"It's a new venture – something 21st century and it's quite exciting."

Mr McQueen grew up in South Ruislip, Middlesex, but now lives in Princes Risborough, Buckinghamshire.

When he was 17, his parents split up and he bought his first house when he was just 18, before buying a home for his mother, a doctor's receptionist.

Last year, he earned £78,000 working as a recruitment sales manager for the Capita group.

His first real job was as a catering manager at Harrow School, but he has worked in e-commerce and IT ever since.

Mr McQueen, who has lived with his girlfriend Nicola Jellyman for eight years, said: "When I was told I'd won I was relieved, overjoyed. My heart missed a beat. It took a couple of seconds to sink in.

"I think what swung it for me was when I rolled off my record to Sir Alan. I've been a project manager three times, won three times and never been in the boardroom."

Yesterday, William Hill had rated Ms Young an 11/8 favourite to win, with Mr Wotherspoon at 9/4, Mr McQueen at 7/2 and Ms Speight, the outsider, at 9/2.

Mr McQueen said: "I am gutted for her (Claire Young]. I believed at some point that Sir Alan would choose her."

Mr McQueen, who raised eyebrows with his "reverse pterodactyl" impression during an interview, left school with eight GCSEs and a BTec diploma in IT.

He said he was "ashamed" about lying on his CV, but insisted the fact he was not educated to the degree of some of the other candidates "shows you can change your situation by hard work and determination".

He added: "Lying on my CV lost me some of my integrity. I learnt from my mistake."

Oh no Sir Alan, you've hired an eejit purveyor of frilly pants instead of Claire
By Roger Cox

IN THE end, the bookies got it wrong and so, frankly, did Sir Alan. Feisty retail buyer Claire Young was the best of the four finalists by a country mile and the clear favourite to become the next Apprentice, but somehow, inexplicably, she ended up losing out to a semi-literate eejit whose best asset seems to be his "reverse pterodactyl" impression.

Fans of Lee McQueen will no doubt bang on about what a "nice guy" he is, but is he really as nice as all that? Remember how he treated Lucinda in the car task?

And does Sir Alan Sugar really need a nice guy in his "organisation", as he is so fond of calling it? Since when has "niceness" been a key skill in business? Claire's vicious boardroom attack on Simon the arrogant bank manager after the photography task may have been unpleasant, but a lot of what she said was right on the money. Sometimes the truth hurts. Better, surely, to have someone in your company who is prepared to speak their mind than another fawning "yes" man (or "yes" woman).

And then there's the whole honesty issue. The fact is that in order to make it on to The Apprentice in the first place, Lee lied about his education on his CV, claiming to have spent two years at Thames Valley University when he in fact dropped out after just a few months. Watching him squirm when his lie was exposed in the interview round was one of the most toe-curling moments of the entire series. A better man might have laughed and said "yeah, you got me bang to rights there, guv'nor, but I only lied because I want this job so badly," but Lee compounded his error by making a couple of cringe-worthy attempts to blag his way out of trouble before finally admitting defeat.

Sir Alan is deluding himself if he thinks he has just employed a bright kid from a rough background. In reality he has handed a six-figure salary to a slightly above-average salesman (Lee did sell frilly pants very well at that big Wedding Expo in Birmingham).

Of course, none of this will come as a surprise to anyone who has been following the series. It's no secret that Sir Alan had lost his grip on reality about halfway through, when he refused to fire the hilariously inept Michael Sophocles time after time because, he claimed, he saw a little bit of himself in him. Whether he was referring to the ex-Edinburgh student's arrogance or diminutive stature, he didn't say.

But to be fair to Sir Alan, he hasn't exactly had a huge array of talent to choose from.

IN QUOTES

"Edinburgh (University] isn't what it used to be" – Sir Alan Sugar's adviser Margaret Mountford, when classics graduate Michael Sophocles was unsure about kosher food

"You've got a mouth the size of the Blackwall Tunnel" – Sir Alan complaining about Claire Young's loudness

"If you're unsure, we can always pull your trousers down and check" – Sir Alan quizzing Michael Sophocles on whether he was a "good Jewish boy"
Click here to watch the video

"If I would have been the recipient of one of your sales pitches, I'd push your bloody face in the cake" – Sir Alan to candidate Sara Dhada

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 12 June 2008 8:59 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Huntly loon,

Aberdeenshire 12/06/2008 01:00:25
For a start I thought Raef would get to the final and I did not really care for Claire because I thought she was loud and ignorant but as the series progressed she learned from her mistakes and I thought she always stepped up to the mark and would work like a trooper when needs required. Alex was a bit young and his own worst enemy but he was a good salesman and had good all round abilities. His personality let him down. He stood back too much at times. Maybe a series five years to soon for him. As for Lee he was enthusiastic and had ability but his poor education skills - spelling in particular - let him down. With so much paperwork in business these days - writing reports, letters, even just memos - written skills are important. His presentational skills also lacked confidence. But what really got it for me was the lie on his CV that he had been 2 years at a university when it was only 4 months. Everyone exaggerates but what they've done but that was a basic and a serious lie. I know Sir Alan prefers street cred to education but this was not about education it was about trust and honesty. Lee should have fallen on his sword on this. The wrong candidate was picked. Claire emerged the best of a rather indifferent bunch. she ought to have won. I'm sure she will find no difficulty getting somewhere. Sir Alan's loss will be some other employer's gain. Is she any good at golf course developments? Has she ever been to Aberdeenshire?
2

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

12/06/2008 01:15:32
Yep, Sir Alan kept making mistakes by keeping Michael and Jenny in. Raef was one victim of this misjudgement and Syra another.

Choosing Lee in the final was a big mistake though. Kids watch the series: what message does it send that someone lied his way to victory? Even if some of the business world is in fact like that, there's some duty to educate required of the BBC.

The conclusion has to be that Sir Alan is taken to the BBC boardroom and fired. The next series needs someone new in the chair.

I rather liked the "Cobra" guy. We could do a lot worse.
3

Morbo,

12/06/2008 10:12:19
He chose someone like himself, what a shock.
4

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 12/06/2008 10:50:23
So no-one else has ever embellished the truth on their CV then?

I'm sick of this "apprentice" thing. I watched the first series, which was interesting and novel. I thought it was a one off. Little was I to know that it would turn into a glorified reality/soap where the contestants are playing more to the camera than actually getting on with the job in hand.

Still, Sir Alan is clearly making enough out of it to keep employing people on six-figure salaries.
5

JT23,

Edinburgh 12/06/2008 11:55:57
First of all, 'bank manager' Simon was a satellite dish engineer and Claire did not only criticise him in the boardroom but undermined him throughout the task.

The best candidate was Raeff (yes, I'm one of those Raeff Rovers *cringe*) but, after him, it was probably Lee not because he was a 'nice guy' but because on every task he put in a good shift and on the one's where he excelled he gave momentum to his whole team.

Claire was a bit too travel agent-esque for my liking and, I would imagine, she would a wear on people who had to work with her day in day out's nerves. Alex was too young and Helene was... there (not much else to say).

So, overall, good decision by Sir Alan but not the best one he could have reached.
6

Truth will prevail,

12/06/2008 12:29:25
#6, not me. I leave irrelevant stuff out (crappy summer jobs etc), but I never make false statements.

If you thought the Apprentice was entertaining then...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PqXw6mS2KA
7

JT,

12/06/2008 12:41:59
This gives the impression that if its good enough for Mr Sugar its good enough for any employer to accept that people lie on CV's. I have been passed over for jobs for people who lied on their CV and not just the odd grade or two, big wopping lies. Needless to say they got caught out and in one case I was asked to go back to the company for another interview, I declined as I didnt want to work for a company who accepted liars.
8

Daibhidh,

Edinburgh 12/06/2008 13:28:15
The guy can't even speak properly or string a setence together...not that I really care, but what was Alan Sugar thinking?!
9

Micropacer,

12/06/2008 13:37:28
I thought Lee was very very average and reminded me of that Guy from the Office. I had a pretty strong dislike for Claire but thought she was far more capable. While he wasnt perfect I thought Alex would have been ther other obivous choice and both were miles ahead of Lee.

10

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12/06/2008 13:45:37
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11

JCA REID,

Annan 12/06/2008 13:57:27
In a previous 'Apprentice' series Sir Alan, in the intro, says he wants honesty & integrity, he HATES liars & cheats. so what does he do....hires a liar & a cheat. A realtive of mine who is a Project Manager has constantly stated, referring to BOTH the UK & US 'Apprentice' series, he have NEVER seen so much mediocrity in so many candidates.
however, we must remember this isn't about finding top business candidates, simply it's a TV reality/soap opera show, where you get to view people's interactions.
12

Yeah1,

12/06/2008 16:31:51
#9

"I have been passed over for jobs for people who lied on their CV and not just the odd grade or two, big wopping lies. Needless to say they got caught out and in one case I was asked to go back to the company for another interview, I declined as I didnt want to work for a company who accepted liars."

I'm surprised you have knowledge of what other people put in their CVs - how exactly did you find out that they had been caught out?

As for not wanting to work for 'a company who accepted liars' - clearly they do NOT accept liars - presumably they found out the person who had got the job was a liar and sacked him, before offering you another interview?

This suggests that they would not have given him the job had they known he had lied, and therefore are not a company who 'accepts liars'.
13

SouthernSkye,

12/06/2008 18:24:31
A great example to one and all. A liar who cannot spell. I wonder if he would consider entering into politics?!
14

Stu_R_20,

Edinburgh 12/06/2008 18:24:40
#9
Sounds like you were passed over for the better candidate(s), sour grapes.

Congrats to the lad although I felt Raef was definately the strongest candidate.
15

,

12/06/2008 18:30:26
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16

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12/06/2008 18:32:48
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17

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12/06/2008 18:33:29
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18

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12/06/2008 18:34:24
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19

Dumb Eye @,

12/06/2008 23:36:14
IT'S A TELEVISION PROGRAMME!

What the f*** is a so-called up-market newspaper doing publishing this drivel as "news"?

 

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