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'I
doubt you're a real billionaire': Trump's brutal letter
to Richard Branson - 4th October 2017







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The
letter came to light after Branson published an excerpt
from it in his new autobiography Finding My Virginity.
Picture / File photo. news.com.au
Richard
Branson has revealed a brutal letter he received from
Donald Trump back in 2004, giving an insight into
the ongoing feud between the two.
The
letter came to light after Branson published an excerpt
from it in his new autobiography Finding My Virginity.
Throughout
the letter, Trump refers to Branson's show The Rebel
Billionaire: Branson's Quest for the Best, which launched
around the same time as The Apprentice made its debut
and dealt with similar content.
"You
have no television persona and, as I found out with
others a long time ago, if it's not there there's
not a thing in the world you can do about it,"
the letter read.
Trump
then goes on to take aim at Virgin Airlines, which
Branson founded, suggesting there is no way he could
be a billionaire.
"At
least your dismal ratings can now allow you to concentrate
on your airline which, I am sure, needs every ounce
of your energy. It is obviously a terrible business
and I can't imagine, with fuel prices etc, that you
can be doing any better in it than anyone else,"
he writes.
Like
television, you should try to get out of the airline
business too, as soon as possible! Actually, I wonder
out loud how you can be anywhere close to a billionaire
and be in that business."
Adding:
"Perhaps the title of your show, The Rebel Billionaire,
is misleading?"
He ends the scathing note by taking one more jab at
Branson's show.
"In
any event, do not use me to promote your rapidly sinking
show - you are a big boy, try doing it yourself!"
Branson
replied with his own letter five days later, in a
noticeably more diplomatic tone.
"Thanks for your note. I think if you look carefully
through the press cuttings, I have actually avoided
'nasty' comments. I have enjoyed the time we have
spent together and would not denigrate you personally,"
he wrote.
Branson
said that many interviewers asked him questions about
Trump and he told them that he didn't agree with some
of Trump's "10 Rules for Success", particularly
the advice to "go all out to get your own back
on anyone who crosses you".
He
calls out Trump for his own offensive remarks that
he had been making in the media.
"I have read what I believe can be misconstrued
as 'nasty' comments from you about myself in the press
over the last couple of weeks and - although tempted
- have to date decided not to respond to them and
to rise above them," Branson writes.
In
response to Trump's gibe about whether Branson could
even be considered a billionaire he confirmed that
he has "created six billion-dollar empires in
six completely different sectors and I think that
qualifies Fox to title this show 'The Rebel Billionaire'".
It
is no secret that the two business tycoons have not
always seen eye-to-eye.
Just before the Presidential election last year, Branson
published a blog post describing his "bizarre"
first encounter with Trump.
According
to Branson, Trump had spent the whole lunch meeting
talking about how he was going to get revenge on a
list of people who had refused to help him when he
was near bankruptcy.
He
expressed concerns that Trump's "vindictive streak"
could be "so dangerous if he got into the White
House", sharing the post on Twitter alongside
the hashtag #ImWithHer in a show of support for Trump's
opponent Hillary Clinton.
"The
US President needs to understand & engage with
wider world issues, not petty personal quarrels #ImWithHer."
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