HAMPTONS MAGAZINE
"We chatted with Kwame a bit and discovered that even though he had numerous offers after his stint as Donald Trump's Apprentice runner-up he decided to try his hand at running his own business. The risk of being his own boss was more important than just cashing a paycheck. ...He was the life of the party smiling all night and held court all evening in the center of things. We can't wait to see him again and wish him all the best. Legacy Holdings, his new venture, operates from offices at One Penn Plaza right in the heart of the city."
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"...'The Apprentice' gets real and talks development in Prince George's County Washington D.C." |
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New York Magazine Business & Finance Section
The names that follow are notable for the quality they all share: Most people will have never heard of a single one of them, despite their place among New York’s and London’s wealthiest. It says a lot that the most famous Goldman veteran—even more so than Jon Corzine and former co-chairman Bob Rubin, who went on to become Secretary of the Treasury—is Kwame Jackson, from the first year of Donald Trump’s The Apprentice. Jackson reportedly asked for a leave of absence to participate in The Apprentice but was told it was “too much of a reputational risk.” So he quit.
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