Paul Callaghan has become the latest person to leave BBC’s reality show, The Apprentice. What makes it worse is that he truly believes that he should not have been the one to go and that he was only sent home because of his relationship with fellow contender, Katie Hopkins.
Speaking to The Manchester Evening News Paul said:
“I was totally robbed. It was so unfair. Based on the task in isolation, you could say I made fundamental mistakes, maybe I bought the wrong sort of produce.
“But if you look at the three people in the boardroom and take our overall performance into account, it was obvious that Adam should have gone.”
He said of his relationship with Katie: “We were mates. We did get close.”
Katie Hopkins and Paul Callaghan were the love story of this years Apprentice show. Well I say love, I really mean lust. The pair are reported to have often sneaked away from the rest of the group to engage in a noisy romps. I suppose it helped them relieve the stress!
A show insider told The News Of The World: “The contestants were all letting their hair down after a tense day doing the doggie task when they had to design a pet product.
“There was no stopping Katie and Paul as the booze flowed. They had been flirting outrageously and obviously just couldn’t wait any longer. They ran up the stairs giggling like schoolkids to the empty room and slammed the door behind them. Next morning, Paul admitted they’d had sex. Continue reading ‘The Apprentice: Katie Hopkins and Paul Callaghan’s X Rated Romps!‘ »
Paul Callaghan and Katie Hopkins have decided to escape the wrath of Sir Alan Sugar and call off their brief fling.
The pair had infuriated Sir Alan by getting together while filming for the BBC’s latest Apprentice series. Sir Alan was adamant that contestants should not mix business with pleasure.
Seems like they now agree.
Paul Callaghan
Age: 27
Qualifications: BSc Engineering Physics
Career: Ex-Army Lieutenant
Home town: Southampton
Profile: Graduating from the rigorous Sandhurst Royal Military Academy which encompassed command leadership and management training, he became HR and Resource Manager for the Army and was in charge of recruiting potential officers into the Royal Artillery. He was posted to Iraq as Infantry Commander and spent six months serving in Basra. His time in the military has taught him cool, calm and collected leadership and he has no time for dilly-dallying. First job was selling jumpers on his parents market stall. A real smooth player his hobbies include sky diving, polo, skiing and yachting and his biggest fear is being eaten by a shark.
He says: “My lack of commercial experience might be a weakness but my leadership and organisational qualities are definite strengths.”