Donald Trump said he doesn't plan to woo delegates with his luxury clubs and jets in order to ensure additional support at the Republican National Convention.

'Look, nobody has better toys than I do,' he told reporters at a stop on Staten Island yesterday, according to the New York Times.

'You're basically buying these people,' Trump continued. 'You're basically saying 'Delegate, listen, we're going to send you to Mar-a-Lago on a Boeing 757, you're going to use the spa, you're going to this, you're going to that, we want your vote.'

'That's a corrupt system,' Trump added.

It may be 'corrupt' in Trump's mind, but the Washington Post looked into how much delegates could be bought and some legal experts suggested that a campaign could cover an all-expenses-paid trip to meet campaign staff at a luxury resort like Trump's Mar-a-Lago.

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Donald Trump, talking to reporters on Staten Island yesterday, said that while he has the best 'toys,' he won't spoil Republican National Convention delegates because the system is 'corrupt'

Donald Trump could shower Republican delegates with travel and lodging at his exclusive Mar-a-Lago resort - but he said he won't do it

Donald Trump has used his Palm Beach property, Mar-a-Lago, as the backdrop of campaign events, but won't use the property to woo Republican National Convention delegates

While Donald Trump has arrived on his personal plane to talk to supporters, he won't use the 757 to get additional support from convention delegates

Donald Trump could legally shuttle around delegates in his own private 757, but he told reporters yesterday on Staten Island that he wouldn't do it

The Post reported that under regulations established in the 1980s, delegates aren't allowed to take money from corporations, labor unions, federal contractor or foreign nationals, but an individual donor can bankroll their elections to get selected to go to the conventions.

This includes money that would go toward travel and leisure.

While a contribution from an individual to a delegate doesn't have to be disclosed, it can't have been made in coordination with a campaign or as an effort by that individual to bolster the chances of an individual candidate.

'It's almost like we need a campaign finance system for delegates,' Gregory Carlson, a 27-year-old who wasn't successful in becoming a Colorado delegate, told the Post. 'This is why we need to put serious thought into this and who are immune to being paid off with below-board messages.'

Trump, who's won the most primaries thus far, but as of late keeps getting routed by Cruz in getting supporters selected as delegates told reporters that he hopes the frustration with this system doesn't turn violent at the convention.

'And I don't think it will,' he said. 'But I will say this: It's a rigged system. It's a crooked system. It's 100 percent crooked,' Trump said.

In a separate interview with the Washington Post, Trump noted how he wanted to see more pizzazz at the July confab, blasting the 2012 event as 'the single most boring convention I've ever seen.

'It's very important to put some showbiz into a convention, otherwise people are going to fall asleep,' Trump told the Post last week.

He recalled that 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney had made the last convention even duller by failing to air a convention video that starred Trump delivering his trademark Apprentice line to an actor portraying President Barack Obama.

In 2012, the most Hollywood moment came courtesy of actor Clint Eastwood who spent nearly 12 minutes talking to an empty chair that was supposed to represent President Barack Obama

Other GOP convention mainstays include actor Jon Voight (left), pictured at the GOP 2012 convention, and actor Stephen Baldwin (right), pictured at the 2008 convention though he attended the 2012 convention too

'I said, 'Barack Hussein Obama, you're fired!'' Trump recalled. 'But [the Romney campaign] never played it. They thought it was too controversial. Stupid people. The cinematographer said it was one of the best things he ever did.'

Four years ago in Tampa, the Republican National Convention followed tradition and filled time with GOP standard-bearers in the majority of speaking slots.

The one bit of Hollywood spice was a nearly 12-minute-long meandering speech delivered by actor Clint Eastwood, who spent a good chunk of his time talking to an empty chair and pretending that it was President Obama.

The entire first day of convention programming was canceled due to a storms, which was when Trump's video was supposed to be played, according to an NBC News report from the time.

As far as other celebrity guests, actor Jon Voight showed up to the Florida confab.

Stephen Baldwin, the least-famous, most-conservative of the acting brothers was also on hand.

While outside the security gates more raucous events – headlined by Kid Rock, Journey and the super group Camp Freddy – occurred.

'We don't have the people who know how to put showbiz into the convention,' Trump complained to the Post

Kid Rock, shown here performing at a rally for Mitt Romney, was tapped during the 2012 Republican National Convention to play a show outside the official venues

So what would Trump bring to the table?

Likely some more interesting guests.

He told the Post he'd like to see other business people and other notables in speaking slots rather than the typical crowd of Republicans.

When asked by the Post journalists if he would include, say, rising Republican star Nikki Haley, the governor of South Carolina who put her weight behind Florida Sen. Marco Rubio days before her state's pivotal primary and then later backed Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Trump gave a not-so-much.

'Nikki Haley would not be my first choice,' the billionaire noted.

But the veteran of both pageants and reality TV won't be able to make these decisions himself, even if he earns the 1,237 delegates needed to clinch the nomination before the convention, as plans are left up to chairman Reince Priebus and the Republican National Committee.

And because of Trump's precarious position as the longtime frontrunner who may not quite have enough delegates to be the outright nominee, those associated with other campaigns suggested restraint.

Rep. Steve King, the national co-chairman of Cruz's campaign told the Post that 'the [convention] program should be set by a balanced mix of the candidates and the RNC ... You don't wan tto give Trump a blank check to run the convention.'

Ohio Gov. John Kasich's chief strategist John Weaver said Trump shouldn't be able to decide anything because he's not the nominee.