To be honest I didn't think any of them really fulfilled the brief 'French and sexy'; I can't remember what the distiller's brief was, but I can't reallyl see what they would have spent £10,000 on.
SPQR stands for "Senatus Populusque Romanus", which means "The Senate and People of Rome", and it was written or stamped on official documents, flags, state emblems etc.
If, however, you are a reader of Italian Asterix books, it stands for "Sono pazzi questi Romani", which means (as Obelix would put it) "These Romans are crazy".
Heidi Stephens wrote that Pure Evil looked more Geography Teacher and that the artists' names dropped by Tom sounded "like trucker handles or the names of people who ring up BBC Radio 2 to report a pile-up".
Comments
Selected:
Nathan Bowen
Pure Evil
Copyright
James Jessop
Rejected
SPQR
Yes, I agree. That's why I wanted to know who it was so I could see if he had anything online.
Pure Evil was evil I thought !:cool:
Copyright - http://www.cantcopyright.co.uk/
SPQR - http://spqr.uk.net
Pure Evil - http://www.pureevilclothing.com
Nathan Bowen - http://www.artofnathanbowen.com/
James Jessop - http://jamesjessop.co.uk/
If, however, you are a reader of Italian Asterix books, it stands for "Sono pazzi questi Romani", which means (as Obelix would put it) "These Romans are crazy".
Heidi Stephens wrote that Pure Evil looked more Geography Teacher and that the artists' names dropped by Tom sounded "like trucker handles or the names of people who ring up BBC Radio 2 to report a pile-up".
I think this is the funniest Apprentice blog (together with her one on the Condiments task):
http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/tvandradioblog/2012/may/09/the-apprentice-2012-live-blog