|

Disabled
Attorney Sues 'Apprentice' Producers Over Bias
By Jim Suhr
The Associated Press
New York Lawyer
February 10, 2005
ST. LOUIS -- A quadriplegic
lawyer has sued producers of NBC's "The Apprentice," saying the
tryouts for the popular reality show discriminate by requiring that
would-be contestants be in excellent physical health.
In his federal lawsuit
filed here last week, James Schottel Jr. wants a preliminary
injunction that would force the show's producers to drop such
requirements that exclude him and "others similarly situated" from
being considered for the show.
The St. Louis attorney, who
has applied to try out for the show when auditions are to be staged
here Friday, seeks no monetary damages. He said the lawsuit only is
meant to correct a perceived Americans with Disabilities Act
violation by Trump Productions LLC and Mark Burnett Productions LLC.
"This isn't a frivolous
lawsuit," Schottel said Wednesday. "Since the ADA was enacted, there
have been great steps in new buildings and accessibility by (the
disabled). But I rarely see a person with a disability on anything"
on television.
Schottel, who has not seen
disabled people on "The Apprentice" show that bills itself as a "15-
week job interview," said
he's concerned that the application process either blocks or
discourages them. He cited a form warning applicants that "you must
be in excellent physical and mental health" and "meet all physical
and psychological requirements."
Still, Schottel said he has
no evidence anyone disabled has been rejected or discouraged by the
show, now in its third season and pitting nine college graduates
against an equal number of high school grads in what NBC bills as
"book smarts against street smarts."
The series' prize is a job
with a Donald Trump enterprise.
A spokeswoman for the Trump
Organization in New York directed questions to Los Angeles-
based Mark Burnett
Productions, which did not return messages.
A spokesman for NBC, which
was not named in the lawsuit, said several applicants in wheelchairs
were interviewed during a casting call last week in New York.
Schottel called himself a
fan of the real-estate mogul Trump, who he doesn't believe condones
discrimination and "may leave all this more to the production
company."
Schottel, a St. Louis
native, attended Baker University in Baldwin City, Kan., where he
kicked a 44-yard field goal in a playoff football game his freshman
year. He said he sustained a spinal cord injury during a 1991
fraternity hazing in which he said no alcohol was involved. He
graduated from Saint Louis University's law school in 1999.
The latest season of "The
Apprentice," which premiered last month, offers some distinctions in
the 18 cast members compared with previous seasons. There are more
older candidates (the oldest is 41), more candidates with children
(at least three are parents), more candidates with real estate
experience (at least six) and no Ivy League graduates.
[Index
to Articles]
|