The Apprentice viewers pined for The Traitors as Lord Alan Sugar sent his contestants to the Scottish Highlands in Thursday’s debut episode.
The BBC show was back with a bang with 18 hopefuls battling it out to gain a £250,000 from the business mogul.
But with the fresh batch of candidates heading to Cawdor Castle to run a luxury away day, viewers couldn’t help but draw comparisons to The Traitors, which ended on Friday.
The Traitors is filmed at Ardross Castle, located in the Highlands almost 20 miles north of Inverness.
Fans took to X, formerly Twitter, to say they were hoping The Traitors host would suddenly turn up as the scenes echoed the show with contestants arriving to the castle in blacked out Range Rovers.
They wrote: ‘The producers sending them to a Scottish castle for the first episode to ease us into our post-Traitors era.

The Apprentice viewers pined for The Traitors as Lord Alan Sugar sent his contestants to the Scottish Highlands in Thursday’s debut episode

But with the fresh batch of candidates heading to Cawdor Castle to run a luxury away day, viewers couldn’t help but draw comparisons to The Traitors, which ended on Friday.
‘It’s like The Traitors all over again’ and ‘Tim’s jacket is giving Traitor vibes!’
‘Genuinely thought that was The Traitors castle! I was hoping to see Claudia and her fringe at any given second.’
‘Can’t wait for these lot to be at the round table. I think Karen is the Traitor.’ and ‘Not The Apprentice getting their own Traitors castle.’
An embarrassing cockup in the kitchen resulted in one team garnishing fish cakes in sweet crumble instead of breadcrumbs as the rival group served up cold food 45 minutes after it had left the oven.
The mistakes didn’t go unnoticed by Lord Sugar’s trusted aids Baroness Karren Brady, 54, and Tim Campbell, 46, who shuddered with pity over the contestant’s shambolic efforts.

The Traitors is filmed at Ardross Castle, located in the Highlands almost 20 miles north of Inverness (pictured)









Lord Sugar is on the hunt for his next ‘big time’ business partner and someone that is going to make him millions

After whittling down thousands of applications and holding countrywide auditions, the mogul was horrified to discover that his latest recruits had made him a financial loss

The 18 candidates are challenged with hosting a luxury away day in the Scottish Highlands but the paying customers are left far from satisfied

An embarrassing cockup in the kitchen resulted in one team garnishing fish cakes in sweet crumble instead of breadcrumbs
Split into men and women’s teams, Karren, who oversaw the females, said the fish cakes were one of the worst things she had ever tasted.
She added: ‘It’s obviously crumble on a fishcake… it is disgusting.’
Lord Sugar, who’s been at the helm of the BBC show for the past 18 years, says the useless display from the candidates is the reason why he doesn’t oversee the tasks himself.
He said: ‘I will leave that to Karren and Tim… it was a tough one but if I was there, I would probably have had to jump in and do the cooking.’
The billionaire remarked that watching the mistakes from the under pressure contestants unravel was like ‘seeing your mother in law drive your Ferrari over a cliff.’
There were even more failings in the kitchen from the men, who despite being led by pie company owner Phil Turner, served up stone cold sausages.
Sales executive Oliver Medforth appeared to shock himself after forgetting to include the flour while making a batch of brownies for dessert – having to start over again.
Instead of their ‘welcome drink’ being a glass of bubbles, they gave guests tap water.
And time overran during the abseiling part of the task to such an extent that project manager Virdi Singh Mazaria left his paying customers with just four minutes to enjoy a half hour long Scottish country dance lesson – because they had to get the train home.

Sales executive Oliver Medforth appeared to shock himself after forgetting to include the flour while making a batch of brownies for dessert – having to start over again

Karren says seeing the candidates make mistakes is one of the reasons viewers love to watch the show and entrepreneurs even learn what to avoid when running their own businesses

Contestants including yoga company owner Onyeka Nweze, Maura Rath, Noor Bouziane, Raj Chohan and Sam Saadet (top row L-R) are competing for Lord Sugar’s £250,000 investment
The most mortifying moment of the show’s first episode, which airs on Thursday night, came from recruitment director Jack Davies who had the audacity to ask disgruntled guests for a ‘tip’, which went down like a lead balloon.
But Karren says seeing the candidates make mistakes is one of the reasons viewers love to watch the show – and entrepreneurs even learn what to avoid when running their own businesses.
She said: ‘There’s no script in this show and everything that unfolds, unfolds, it’s authentic, it’s real.
‘Lots of people watch this show to see what to do in business and what not to do. As it unfolds, the viewers see it… there are no retakes.’
Once Lord Sugar has plucked out the weak from the strong contestants, they begin to thrive and finally put money in the bank.
Karren revealed this year’s crop earn the ‘greatest win in terms of value’ as they manage to impress the boss, who’s giving away £250,000 of his own money to the winner.
She said: ‘I’m talking millions… so some of them really come shining to the top.’
The Apprentice returns at 9pm on Thursday, February 1 on BBC One and iPlayer
Leave a Reply