Can’t get enough of President-elect Donald Trump on all the news networks and comedy shows?

Well, cable business network CNBC is working on a solution.

The Comcast-owned unit is in talks to air the long-running reality series “The Apprentice,” which made the real estate mogul a TV star, The Post has learned.

“It’s going to CNBC,” a well-placed source revealed. “The deal is not quite done yet,” this person added, saying talks are continuing.

A CNBC spokesman said there is no current deal but “we’ve always loved the show and it certainly fits nicely in our prime time with ‘The Profit,’ ‘Jay Leno’s Garage,’ ‘Shark Tank,’ and ‘Billion Dollar Buyer.’ ”

CNBC has shown repeats of the show before — in 2004 in prime time on Tuesdays and Fridays.

The original aired on NBC.

According to Tinseltown database IMDB, the president-elect appeared in 186 episodes from 2004 to 2015. The show was created by reality-TV producer Mark Burnett and showcases Trump as a boardroom boss who sets challenges for a group of hungry entrepreneurs. The show also starred daughter Ivanka Trump and Trump Organization exec George Ross.

One expert on pricing of old reality shows said channels typically pay $5,000 to $100,000 per hour depending on demand and whether digital rights are included.

The series is owned by MGM, which acquired Burnett’s assets and put him in charge of its TV division in 2015.

NBC is to debut the latest spin-off, “The New Celebrity Apprentice” with Arnold Schwarzenegger, on Jan. 2.

Boardroom advisers on the new show include Warren Buffett, former Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer, mod el-producer Tyra Banks, actress-entrepreneur Jessica Alba and Arnold’s nephew, Patrick Knapp Schwarzenegger.

Trump holds an economic interest in the series, several sources confirmed to The Post. It’s unclear what would happen to potential royalties that would go to Trump if the deal is sealed.