Pod Save the World - World Corrupt Episode 1: A Toxic Love Affair between Politics and Sports
Episode Date: October 8, 2022This fall, when the eyes of the world turn towards Qatar for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, a shadow looms over the tournament, which is one of the most watched events in the world. The sports landscape bei...ng co-opted for geo-political and corporate gain is nothing new, but this year's iteration of football's biggest competition may be the most expensive example to date. Pod Save the World’s Tommy Vietor and Roger Bennett of Men in Blazers join forces to unravel the riddle of how to enjoy the game we love while holding the powers that control it accountable for their corruptive policies and practices. On this inaugural episode of World Corrupt, a collaboration from Men in Blazers Media Network and Crooked Media, the two hosts share the memories that helped them first fall in love with soccer, while also looking back into the annals of history at past instances of a phenomenon known as "sportswashing.”
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The winner to organize the 222 FIFA World Cup is Qatar.
6,500 migrant workers have died in Qatar since it won its World Cup bid.
That is devastating.
Sports is always a bloody emotional release.
To joy, a refuge, a place we seek shelter from the storm of everyday life.
How will we consume?
essentially a World Cup soaked in blood.
Crooked Medius Tommy Vito.
Men and Blazers, Roger Bennett.
This is like one of those old crossover episodes.
When Scooby-Doo would team up with Batman and attempt to solve some caper,
surely there's only one way this can end.
As pulling off the mask of a frumpy old man, only to be reminded that he would have got away
with it if it wasn't for us pesky kids.
See, I was thinking there was like, not since Full House met family.
have two audiences been this confused, probably, if we're being honest.
But, Raj, I am thrilled to do this series with you because it combines three of my passions, sports,
foreign policy, and feeling guilty.
And all it took for us to actually do this pod was really for the world to go to crap.
A total confluence of terrifying forces.
So terrifying.
They're threatening to the story.
One of the single things that we love the most, which is sports in general.
as you say, and the World Cup in particular,
the crown jewel of the sport this time round is going to be in Qatar.
Yes, a nation state that was awarded the sport's most coveted competition corruptly
and then proceeded to build the infrastructure for the tournament
with migrant labour practices that have been likened to modern slavery.
So why is this happening?
What makes F1 golf the World Cup so bloody a try?
to despots and deviance.
To be honest,
Roger, the answer is kind of complicated
and what you believe
probably depends on your perspective.
You and I have learned a lot
since we started working on this podcast
and reporting it out several months ago,
including about some of our own biases.
And we want to bring you guys
to the audience with us along that journey.
When I hear the word journey,
I think it's all going to end
with you and me doing ayahuasca
with Aaron Rogers in the desert somewhere.
Stay tuned, Raj.
Maybe it's a bonus episode.
To answer your question,
it'd be seven hours, 209 minutes, special bonus.
So you get Joe Rogan involved?
This could be a hit.
Some experts out there argue that, look, vanity is the reason all these golf autocrats want to buy football clubs.
You know, they have massive amounts of money.
They have even bigger egos, and they're competitive.
And so you might view Qatar's motivation for wanting to host the World Cup.
It's just an effort to throw itself kind of a global coming-out party.
You know, they want to show that Qatar,
is open for business and they want to compete with their more cosmopolitan neighbors in Dubai.
Oh, Dubai. That massive modern city in the neighboring United Arab Emirates,
that went from small desert town to home of literally the tallest building of the world within about 50 years.
Amazingly, yes, exactly. And that same UAE has invested huge money into soccer powerhouses like Manchester City.
their neighbors in Saudi Arabia just followed suit last year
when they brought their own English Premier League club called Newcastle.
Start to kind of feel like a global pitch measuring contest if you get my drift.
I like what you did there, Tommy.
I just take that back.
I hate what you did there.
I hate what I did there too.
But listen, hosting the World Cup also gives Qatar a reason to spend big money
on infrastructure projects that they need.
Subways, stadiums, hotels.
It helps them attract Western companies and investment.
There are some clear practical benefits, too.
You're a very practical, man, but we've got to be honest.
So many of the activists and human rights groups that we've spent time talking to over the past few months had they much dark of Qatar's motives.
You're right, they did.
They view Qatar's 22 bid as above all else, just a global PR campaign to sell a more modern image to the world and to connect guitar with the glamorous and glitzy world of Internet.
national football and not the, you know, darker corners of their human rights in foreign policy
record.
A.k.a. sports washing.
The term we're going to introduce you to that you're going to hate, it's when an individual
or a state uses sports to burnish their reputation or, frankly, hide their sins.
It doesn't matter if you're a Russian oligarch or an authoritarian country.
Buying a team or hosting a major sporting event is an easy way to get everybody talking about
what's happening on the field instead of your problems off of it.
The term is relatively new, but the concept has been around for a long time.
The most infamous example is when Hitler's Germany hosted the 1936 Olympic Games.
Hitler wanted to show the world the superiority of Nazi Germany and the Aryan race,
and that is, of course, until a black American man named Jesse Owens won four gold medals
and humiliated him in front of the world.
And for that, Jesse, we thank you for eternity.
but you could really argue, Raj, that the concept goes back much further,
like the bread and circuses in ancient Rome.
The reality is we've all got to check on moral compasses,
how we consume and revel in these things.
We love, honestly, more than love, that we live for
and not at least tangentially be complicit
in all of the undercurrents that operate below the surface,
just bubbling away.
John Oliver, he comes on our show every single year,
and I believe he's our most repeat guest ever, actually.
Massive, massive Liverpool fan. Football really means everything to that gent.
You know, we're talking about how he's going to approach the World Cup and Guitar in November.
And he explains so bloody eloquently the question this all distills down to.
There has never been anything more complicated than balancing your love for the World Cup
with the organisation that produces it, right?
We've all felt that.
We've done two stories on our show about FIFA, which often end with,
and I'm still going to watch it.
Yes, FIFA is an international crime syndicate,
but I love the thing they produced so much.
I guess the really brutal honesty is that I'm probably going to watch and enjoy a World Cup
that shouldn't be happening there.
I don't know what that says about me as a human being,
but it's not great.
I probably don't have the strength of me not to watch
what is normally my absolute favorite thing in the world
that I look forward to watching for exactly four years.
Truthfully, look, I focus on politics,
I talk about international affairs,
but on my foreign policy show,
Ben and I talk about sports nearly every week.
And it's not just because we're addicts like you,
it's because sports and politics and culture constantly overlap, right?
I mean, too often in the U.S.,
that overlap is political leaders trying to tell athletes,
usually black athletes, they should be quiet, right?
They're denounced for kneeling during the national anthem.
You have Fox News host Laura Ingram infamously telling LeBron James this.
No one voted for you.
Millions elected Trump to be their coach.
So keep the political commentary to yourself, or as someone once said, shut up and dribble.
The suggestion that sports used to be some safe space away from political debates in the U.S. or anywhere else is just absurd.
I mean, look at Jim Brown, look at.
Jackie Robinson, what they did to break racial barriers in this country and fight for racial justice.
Martina Navratilova, the WNBA star Brittany Griner, who's currently being detained in Russia,
fought for LGBT rights. Venus and Serena Williams demanded gender and pay equity.
Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali, athletes have run for office. It is no different internationally.
Football is that almost times 100 because it's a global game that's inextricably linked to politics.
And I've always said, honestly, ultimately it's what draws me to it.
When international football and when World Cups take place,
you have two teams taking the field and their histories, their cultures,
their economies, their politics, they take the field alongside them.
I've always said football is just a mirror that refracts what's happening to society,
back to the world.
Tommy, we've talked about this when you had the terrible taste to allow me on to pod save the world.
You got rid of that producer that allowed me on.
And you from the glimmer in the Tommy V.I.
I knew that football was beginning to speak to you.
And I actually, I need to say this before we dive in.
Some people would say I did you dirty because I convinced you to support trademark,
the greatest football club in the world, aka Everton Football Club,
my hometown team from Liverpool that wants Great Port City in the northwest of England.
Think Baltimore of Great Britain, British Charmed City.
And for those of you listening, who may not be massive Premier League fans,
you could be asking yourself, wait, aren't Liverpool the team from Liverpool?
And it's true, it's a bit like the Yankees, Liverpool, the Mets are Everton, the Clippers to Los Angeles Lakers or the Roger Clinton to Liverpool's bill.
But I prefer to think of them as a team that runs on heart, on emotion.
Time for you've experienced it, and you believe.
I'm new to this game.
I did notice we recently lost to an MLS team in America.
that. We do a lot of good work for charity. I'm guessing that's not good. So listen, truthfully,
Raj, I've wanted to get into football, into soccer for a very long time. So when you came on,
I demanded that Raj act as my soccer sommelier and help me pick a club. And now correct me if I'm
wrong, Raj, but I think, you know, you knew I grew up near Boston as a Red Sox fan. I think you picked
up on some some pining for the pre-2004 lovable loser Red Sox teams, maybe a wisp of self-loathing
and desperation.
More than a wist, Thomas.
There was a willingness to wallow in melancholy.
Yes, a propensity for self-sabotage.
And then you thought, Everton Man.
Welcome to Everton Football Club, Thomas, me.
But even if they don't win much, look, the games are so much fun to watch.
I watch every week.
We even beat Chelsea this year.
That's a big deal, right?
One of the best clubs in the world.
It was.
I think Tommy is very keen.
Thought about getting an Everton tramp stamp, which I warned him off.
But he gets on Twitter and is just like,
whatever team about to play.
they'd be like, Chelsea, we proper hate them.
I'm like, Tommy, no, no, no, no.
Just pace yourself, pace yourself, lab.
But what is amazing about football?
Going up in Liverpool, my city,
we consumed our football back in those days
by going live to watch our local club
in their grubby home stadium.
We'd cram into drafty, rainy stands
which stank a sweat and spilt beer,
body odour and police horse turd,
all the elements.
So we watched the team that you love.
They just huff and puff and puff.
a muddy pitch.
These were, I'd use a word like athletes slightly loosely.
They were really men who just kicked each other slumly for 45 minutes
and then retreated into the locker room for a pie, a pint, a cigarette.
And you were guaranteed that some oversized fan behind you would roll up their stadium program.
Just pee through it onto the back of your leg.
It was like, oh, you feel that warmth.
You'd be like, what is that?
Oh, God, proper football.
But the first time international football truly captured my imagination.
I was seven, I think World Cup
1978 was on television
it was held in Argentina
which felt like, honestly, the other side of the moon
and I know people are listening
we live in an era where we can not only
watch any highlight from any league in the world
on our phone, it gets pumped into us
and you will not believe this, but
when I grew up as a kid in England,
live televised sports
of any type was just an incredible
rarity in late 1970. Honestly,
we'd only just bloody invented electricity.
in our neck of the woods.
And seeing footballers from other parts of the world
was just something that never happened.
And this was mesmerizing.
Honestly, it's one of my earliest memories.
It's one of my most poignant memories.
It's one of my most technical memories.
And from that point on,
the World Cup was the joy of my life,
as it was for John Oliver.
I mean, look, my first World Cup memory,
the first time it came into my field of view was 1994
when the World Cup was in the United States.
And now, ladies and gentlemen,
Actually got to go to a game, Raj.
I was 14 years old, same haircut.
Then as now, I call it the Mitt Romney.
Did you take a photo of Mitt Romney into the bar?
Is that just happening that choice?
I said, I want this.
Mine is the salt and pepper.
It was Italy, Nigeria at Foxborough Stadium in Boston,
which I don't mind saying is where the New England Patriots
went on to dominate the NFL for the next decade.
But I remember it being a thousand degrees.
We were all rooting for.
Nigeria because they were the underdog and when you know nothing about a game, you root for the
underdog, right? I rewatch some of that game the other day on YouTube and it came back to me.
And so Nigeria was up a goal. The Italians got a red card, but they still managed to come back
and win. It was in a hell of a game. But you know what was truly masterful was Roberto Baggio's
rat tail. Do you remember this? You're talking about the Italian maestro, a Buddhist footballer who was
known as the divine pony tail. You're telling me that Tommy left that game and just turned around to
the barber and said, I need a rat tail and I need it now.
Begged my mother to let me get a rat tail. She, in her infinite wisdom, said no. Thank you,
Mom. I love you forever. Tommy, I think in 1994, I was already bald. And even as a bald man,
I tried to grow a rat tail. Clip on. God, you know what? That's an incredible business idea. I'm
going to make a note to self about that. Clip on rat tails for the modern bald man.
But I just arrived in the US.
And this was really my first face-to-face with American football culture, American soccer culture for the first time.
We joke on our show that soccer is America's sport of the future as it has been since 1972.
And to witness that culture for the first time, when the face of the game here was a gent named Alexi Lalas.
Blokie's ginger-gote clash beautifully with the American team's stand.
Domewashed, denim, uniforms, I crap you not.
And I realize, God, this sport that I love could truly possibly flourish in the nation I adore.
Don't take it for me.
Let's listen to the legendary American sportscaster Jim McKay,
who delivered this point in speech from his perch, high above the 1994 World Cup final,
at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.
So how does it add up in the end?
Well, I've been impressed in this World Cup as much by the things that haven't happened
with the things it had.
It hasn't been a bomb as its attractors predicted in advance,
nor a visiting fan spread violence from coast to coast.
It has been simply the most successful World Cup ever stage
in attendance and worldwide interest.
On American TV, ratings have exceeded predictions by far,
and the games have been marvelous.
America has been at its best in welcoming the world,
and we hope they'll come again soon.
In 1994, it's true, Jim, was a World Cup of True Wonder One.
We both remember fondly,
and that's the beauty of this competition.
It can be both one's own, deeply, personally, individualised.
But it's also shared with millions of people, not just in your family or your town or your neighbourhood.
It truly is a World Cup, a month of Super Bowls, a four-week-long soccer, theme ball mitzvah that unites the world who save it every goal, every tackle, every ill-judge neck tattoo.
And Tommy Vito, what could possibly go wrong?
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Ladies and gentlemen, we'll be organized in Russia.
Oh, right.
The gen you just heard was the president of FIFA,
the then-president of FIFA,
the organisation that runs a World Cup.
His name, Seth Blatter, this was back in 2010,
and that announcement, proper piss me off.
England was meant to get that 2018 World Cup,
but I was still, I remember, still confident,
even amidst my confusion, that 2022 was coming.
to the nation I love, the United States,
and I had it on good authority.
We'd actually secured hosting duties,
and shortly after Blatter stepped up to the microphone again.
The winner to organise the 222 FIFA World Cup is Qatar.
Qatar!
You're taking the piss?
Bloody Qatar.
Now, what?
Tommy?
I am a grown man.
And I've got to be honest.
In this moment, I almost soiled myself this tournament.
Well, first of all, it was meant to be coming to America,
but even setting my American bias aside for one second,
here's what I want to know.
I am, as you know, no geopolitical expert.
But even in that moment, I thought Russia and Qatar,
those would be certainly curious choices,
I think most people would agree for a tournament,
which is meant to be the world's most revered global sporting event.
Yeah. Curious is certainly one way to describe it. Crazy might be another. Okay, let's talk a little bit just about some background at each of these countries. I suspect that by now listeners have a pretty good sense of what Russia is like under President Vladimir Putin. Putin has been waging this horrific war in Ukraine for months. He has killed tens of thousands of innocent people. He's driven millions more from their homes. And, you know, even back in Russia, I mean, Russian citizens who criticize the war or the government generally are literally thrown in prison for years.
Russia is an autocracy, which means it's ruled by Vladimir Putin and his power is absolute.
The country is also incredibly corrupt. Putin sits at the top of a corruption food chain,
a corruption human centipede, Raj, if you will. His top advisors and this group of men around
in this coterie of men called the oligarchs have extracted billions of dollars from the state,
and they use that money to do Putin bidding. Qatar is similar to Russia in that one man
runs the show, the Emir. Sheikh Tamim bin al-Hulman.
And both countries have substantial oil and gas deposits.
It's going to be important here because it buys you a lot of influence.
There's little to no room for dissent in either country.
I mean, Putin's most prominent critic is a man named Alexei Navalny, and he has been poisoned, literally, and is currently rotting in a prison on completely made up charges.
In Qatar, women's rights are severely limited.
Same-sex relationships by men can be punished with jail time.
but the biggest divide in the country is between the 10 or 11 percent of the country who are citizens
and the millions of foreign workers who actually built the place.
Now, you know, even Qataris citizens have very few civil liberties or political rights.
The media is censored.
Citizens have basically no say in government decisions.
But they do live a pretty comfortable life because of the state's oil and gas revenue.
However, being a foreign worker in Qatar, your employer calls all the shots.
There is rampant abuse of these workers, unpaid overtime, delayed wages, arbitrary deductions of pay.
And these workers have almost no recourse.
So you have young men in countries like Nigeria or Nepal or the Philippines going to debt, paying recruiters to help them find a job in Qatar in the first place.
And then when they arrive, it is a nightmare.
They're forced to live in squalid group homes.
Their employers have all the leverage.
They can even prevent them from leaving those jobs or returning home.
And it's these foreign workers who are building the infrastructure that is required to put on a World Cup.
And they're doing it in just horrifyingly dangerous conditions.
It can reach up to 120 degrees in the summer in Qatar.
And yet laws that are supposed to prevent construction workers, say, from laboring during the middle of the day, are just routinely ignored.
And those who complain publicly get arrested or even deported.
So those are some of the reasons why Russia and Qatar have these bad reputations globally and get criticized by human.
and rights groups and international organizations, and would love to focus on soccer instead of
themselves. And frankly, it's why FIFA should never have allowed them to host the games in the
first place. Just listening to you two things. First of all, I'm trying to repress the image of
the human centipede of autocrats, which sounds like the worst emo band album of all time. But the obvious
question comes, how did the jewel of world football get to be played back to back? And are those
conditions. In Qatar's case, in a country is smaller than Connecticut, with that climate that you talk
about, which is so unforgiving that they had to lift the tournament from when it's meant to be played
in the summer and just interrupt the whole football calendar around the world so they could dump it
into the slightly cooler November and December. Well, Tommy Vee, turns out this is not a new story,
and it's not even the first time that that amalgam of truckloads of cash and bribes and murderous
regimes literally have coalesced to play benevolent host to your World Cup.
We're in 1934 and Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. He was really sports washing before
sports washing was on vogue. Tommy, just remind people of Ilducci's place in history.
Yeah, I'll keep this one real concise, Rod. She was bad news. Mussolini was the founder and
leader of Italy's fascist party. He ran Italy as a dictatorship for years.
years before deciding to join forces with the Nazis in World War II, it's safe to say that
I'm not a fan.
Also, a massive sports fan.
Oh, no.
And an opportunist who recognized one of the first gentlemen to realize football could be
presented as a public relations platform around the globe, a catalyst for his brand of
nationalism.
And when the Italian team played at home, he enjoyed making a dramatic entrance onto the field.
Picture Benito Mussolini.
I crap you not on a white horse.
And when the Italian team travel aboard,
he instructed players to hold their fascist salutes
until the whistling protesters in foreign nations
had run out of their energy and could scream no more.
And when his country hosted the World Cup in 1934,
traveling fans were first lured by offers to cover 75% of their travel costs.
This is what Mussolini did.
He gave them all these tickets,
which were intricately paper-cutted
because he kind of understood social media
before there was social media
or Instagram before his Instagram.
He made sure these tickets were printed
on the finest quality paper
so that people would go home
and just show people the splendors of Italy.
Look at their tickets.
Look, even their tickets are beautiful
when they returned home.
But Tommy, quickly,
can you just remind us how all this works out for Mussolini?
Not well for Mussolini.
Well for the world.
By 1945, things were going south
for the Nazis, the Axis powers,
and Mussolini and his girlfriend tried to escape.
They tried to get to Spain before the Allied troops could find him.
But he got captured near Lake Cuomo.
I also, I say Lake Como like it's a New York governor,
but, you know, that's on me.
Is it not named after Chris?
I think it might be.
They loved Chris's show so much.
They named the lake after it.
They love when he bench presses on Instagram.
The U.S. and the other allied powers,
they wanted Mussolini detained.
They wanted him tried for war crimes,
but the folks he had been.
brutalizing in Italy had another idea. Mussolini was pretty quickly executed by firing squad,
and his body was hung upside down and put on display in a public square. So not the best way to go.
But that pattern that he kind of patented with the World Cup has played itself out over and over
and over again. That 1978 World Cup that I talked about, the one that Young Roger was so bloody
excited, was mesmerized, it just burned itself into my retina. I was completely unaware of what
was really happening, because Tommy, I mean, you understand this year for better than I do.
1978, Argentina, that dictatorial political climate.
Brutal. I mean, in 1978, Argentinians were living under just a ruthless military dictatorship.
It was led by a man named President Jorge Rafael Vidal Vidala and a collection of military leaders who
came to power in 1976 in a bloodless coup, but they were ultimately remembered for the brutal
repression that swept the country and lasted during their entire time in power. I mean,
they dissolved Congress, they censored the media, dissent was essentially banned, and supporters
of the former president, or basically anyone accused of being a leftist or a communist or any
kind of other dissenter, was at serious risk of getting disappeared. Now, being disappeared could mean
thrown in prison without charges, it could also mean murdered. I mean, people were literally
thrown out of airplanes alive and left for the sharks in the ocean. Truly, truly horrifying stuff.
There was also systematic torture. There was one notorious prison slash torture chamber that was so
close to the World Cup Stadium that you were watching on TV that prisoners could hear the crowd
cheering from their cells. I mean, I can't imagine more of a nightmare. Also, Raj, look, just being honest here,
horrifyingly, America initially supported the government, along with many other dictators in
South America, in the name of fighting communism. In fact, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
was President Vidalas guest of honor at the World Cup. After it was all done, he did a bunch of
interviews and he sung Argentina's praises. It's just a disgusting part of our history we need to reckon
with. So Kissinger is a big, big soccer fan, Raj. I don't know that he's right for this series,
but maybe you can get him on Men and Blazers and check in.
We soccer fans, me and Kissinger, we are the worst.
But that tournament had unwittingly become a corrupt government's last desperate attempt
to try and project a sense of international legitimacy.
The generals of that military hunter set about the task with just a sinister abandoned.
An admiral, Carlos Alberto Lacoste was selected to prepare the nation for the tournament
and he inherited that role after his predecessor.
Let's just say mysteriously was assassinated in the days ahead of his very first.
press conference. I hate it when that happens. Roads were built across the country, massive stadia
constructed. Their seating capacities were occasionally larger than the population of the towns where
they were located. Slums swept to their inhabitants, thousands of whom, as you mentioned, were then
disappeared. And it was an American PR company that led all the spin globally on this effort.
I mean, this is truly disgusting. It was a company called Burson-Marsteller. Still one of the biggest
PR firms in the world, though in 2018 they merged with another giant PR firm and changed their name.
But, you know, unfortunately, the name change can't erase the history and the fact that,
despite widespread reports of human rights violations in Argentina, Burson Marsteller still went ahead,
and they pitched the military junta on a plan to, quote,
project a new progressive and stable image throughout the world.
That is just an incredible sentence you've just uttered.
You can imagine these Americans in just like their Brooks Brothers,
And we're like, look, yep, we know you're a military hunter, but we've got a plan.
Would you like to project a new progressive and stable image to the world?
Here's how.
What a lovely quote.
And unfortunately, American banks were lending the money.
I mean, we are thick in this thing here in the United States.
But, Raj, no surprise that the Burson team focused a lot of their time in the lead-up to the
tournament on trying to rebut negative stories about human rights abuses in Argentina
in working to counteract growing calls in Europe to boycott the World Cup.
which frankly were gaining some steam.
There were murmurs.
I do remember this in the run-up of political protests across the soccer world.
Their English Union of Journalists, God bless them,
provided its members with a Spanish-language handbook to prepare them for the tournament,
one that included such phrases as,
Stop Torturing Me!
I crap you not.
But once the tournament began, the soccer took over.
This is what happens.
We fear, we panic, we ask questions, but the football kicks off.
And I remember when Argentina, when the streets were flooded with people who cheered the generals,
as they stood on the balcony of their presidential palace, they took in the acclaim of their nation.
They had this newfound swarming popularity.
And do you know what they did with that newfound popularity, Tommy?
They invaded part of Chile.
At least it had an adorable name, Roger.
It was called the Beagle conflict.
That's cute.
Was it really?
Mm-hmm.
That's sweet.
I can't say 100% sure that Burston were involved in the naming of that war.
But they're probably like, guys, people hate wars, but they love, they love puppies.
Talking of countries that host World Cups and then immediately proceed to engage in horrific territorial disputes.
That brings us almost to the present day.
Russia, 2018, a tournament conducted.
It really was via the baton of Vladimir Putin.
A gent who just ripped a page.
right on Mussolini's book whenever he could in terms of the horseback riding,
only doubles down, likes to do it shirtless.
And another lover of sports, the gentleman who scores six goals in a hockey game
that's filled with former professionals, other than a rising NHL prospect, Tommy,
even before he had invaded Ukraine, can you give us an idea of life under Putin in Russia?
Look, there was no political space. Putin silences dissent. He shuts down independent media.
so that Russians only hear propaganda that comes from state-run outlets.
And he locks up political opponents who might actually threaten his rule.
And like I mentioned earlier, I mean, Russia is a kleptocracy.
It is corrupt from top to bottom.
And Putin uses events like the World Cup or the Sochi Olympics in 2014
to give contracts for infrastructure projects to his buddies
who then siphon off billions of dollars in state funds, billions of dollars.
One stadium in St. Petersburg, you might have seen it, Raj,
the Krestovsky Stadium was completed eight years late and 540% over budget.
It's literally a monument to corruption.
It's like the Boston Big Dig for FIFA.
Only 540% over budget.
I mean, we could go on when it comes to this tournament.
Again, in Autocrats World Cup playbought pre-tournament crackdowns on dissidents across the country.
And I will say, Tommy, I went to that World Cup with my producer J-dubs,
and we saw what was happening.
And we actually talked about it at the time
on the Men in Blazers podcast.
I'll be honest, I was last in Moscow 10 years ago.
The monument, the history, the dark history,
the deep history of suffering, of pain,
of human inflicted ideas.
They seeped through 10 years ago.
Not now, mate.
This place is gussied up.
I don't know what they've done to their stray dogs.
They seem to have got every beautiful man and woman
in the whole of the former Soviet Republic
it and dumped them into like the five square miles around the Kremlin.
Because if you go further than that, it's like a very different Russia.
And looking back on it, even though we kind of listening to that clip, saw it for what it was
and called it out, we were still amongst thousands of journalists who poured into Russia
and essentially did Putin's bidding. We put pictures of ourselves on the television, having a blast,
You know, on Instagram, social media, in the bars, running around the subways, those beautiful subways.
And most importantly, for Pugh-in at the bloody football games all over social media.
And I'll tell you, one thing I remember, we went to watch Brazil versus Serbia at Spartax, Moscow Stadium just outside of the capital city.
And as soon as we walked in, we were like, oh, my God, the Wi-Fi, the Wi-Fi is incredible.
Because, you know, sporting events or concerts.
They're probably not true with the Russian Public Library.
Yeah.
I mean, you go public library, or you go to most American sporting events,
and you are pretty well guaranteed to be getting zero bars, WTF.
And this was the antithesis of that.
The internet was incredible all the game.
And I remember, I've got to find the clip of this,
because I actually filmed him, filming himself.
There was an incredible Brazilian fan, totally intoxicated in front of us.
Picture in your imagination, essentially Sao Paulo Ronnie from Jersey Shore.
And this gen had traveled all the whole.
way to Russia from Brazil and spent the entirety of the game, WhatsApping every single name
methodically in his address book, just the same conversation over and over again. He didn't
watch a second of the actual game that he'd trouble there to watch. But watching him,
I was like, oh my God, this, this is exactly what Putin wanted. Just images, being back
to countries and around worlds, showing everyone what an incredible time they were missing out on
in Russia, beautiful Russia. And ahead of that 2000,
2018 World Cup final.
Current FIFA president,
Johnny Infantino,
he stepped up and said,
We all fell in love with Russia.
All of us, everyone has been here
for a period of time now,
has discovered a country that we didn't know.
Pueen being by the World Cup,
that optic, that massive PR win.
And he went on to thank Infantino
for your glowing assessment
of our efforts and presented him with an order of friendship medal at the Kremlin in May 2019.
This is Russia.
Gross.
This is FIFA.
And by the way, that medal, Infantino, has constantly refused to return despite the Ukraine invasion.
Tommy, juvenile said it best, I believe.
Give them bread and circuses.
And they will never revolt.
That's really what this is, right?
I mean, you worked in government.
Talk to us a little bit about this age-old policy.
Yeah, I mean, listen, so in Putin's case, I mean, and he said this pretty clearly, he wants to restore the glory of the Soviet Union.
He wants Russia to be seen as powerful and respected in a dominant force on the global stage with himself basking, shirtless on the horse at the center of all of the action.
And that's why Putin will bribe whoever it takes to get the World Cup or to get the Olympics.
You know, that's why Russia had a state-run doping program so that their roided up athletes would rack up gold.
medals, right? But it's not just Putin. Nearly every political leader, to some extent,
wants their people happy, I say nearly every because I'm not sure the North Koreans do, but they
all want to look powerful and in control. And that's why countries and cities compete to host
the World Cup or to host the Olympic Games, even though the economic impact is far from guaranteed
to be positive. In many cases, has left cities and countries deep in debt. But the glory, Rod's,
the glory of being in the center of all that action,
being seen as having delivered for your country,
that lasts forever.
I mean, Mitt Romney ran for president,
in part based off of his experience,
running the Salt Lake City Olympic Games.
In 2009, my boss, Barack Obama,
traveled all the way to Copenhagen
in the middle of the Obamacare fight, right?
We were in the depths of a congressional battle
to personally address the International Olympic Committee
in an effort to bring the Olympic Games home to Chicago.
And Raj, I don't know if you remember,
but that effort did not go so well.
It might have failed to.
We didn't bribe enough, is my sense.
But look, the guy made the trip.
You can never bribe enough is the first rule
for any autocrat who's listening to this podcast.
But when you talk about all this,
when it comes to sport,
the problem about what we do now,
armed with all this insight,
is that sports is always a bloody emotional release.
That's what we said earlier.
It's a joy,
a refuge, a place who seek shelter from the storm of everyday life.
I can't tell you the joy during the pandemic when football came back in Germany to begin with.
Even fanless, just that sense of global connection we all felt again, that diversion,
that sense of shared meaning.
And once a ball's been kicked, we're no longer furious about autocrats,
we're no longer thinking about infrastructure, we're no longer thinking about corruption.
No, we're watching for messy, transcendence, for Alex Morgan.
For Christian Policicitt, we're not sitting there and analyzing soft power and protesting against it.
But right now, we really are. We're at a crossroads. A crossroads, we arguably arrived at a long time ago.
But awarding of this World Cup to Qatar, it was so craven. It was so brazen.
The emotional joyous sport couldn't sweep away the rationale of what we were confronted with by this tournament, by this World Cup, Tommy.
I'm excited to watch. I will love every minute of the game.
but it is hard not to feel like that joy is tempered by my knowledge of the reality of life in Qatar.
I mean, there's a great organization, Raj, called Freedom House.
They score every country in the world based on their citizens' access to political rights and civil liberties.
It's called your global freedom score.
Syria got a one.
No, boy, no.
Sweden got 100.
The U.S. got, we got like an 83.
We're like, we're like that B-B-minus zone.
Oh, bite your arm off for an 803.
We're feeling good.
Qatar got a 25.
So not the worst in the world, but pretty bad.
And life is far worse if you're a woman or intolerable if you're gay.
But, you know, the really ugly thing that we all need to confront as we watch these games is the treatment of foreign workers in Qatar.
Because those stadiums we're watching, these games get played in, these foreign workers are the ones who built them.
They're the ones who built the new roads.
They built all the infrastructure associated with the World Cup.
These are the people, if you get to go to the games, who are cleaning your hotel or staffing the restaurant that you're eating at.
And last year, the Guardian reported that 6,500 migrant workers have died in Qatar since it won its World Cup bid.
That is devastating. That is hard to move on from.
At World Cup, there was only won by Qatar, corruptly given to them by football's governing body.
They clearly, at this point, we just know from the investigations, the myriad of them around the world.
they did not win the right to host this tournament or merit,
having in a fashion that was honestly thought impossible,
but they did it.
Coffers were filled, even a ton of airbus, A320.
I don't know what the plural of that is.
Is it air buses?
Is it air by?
We're ordered by Qatar from a French production planning to lose.
And that was enough to encourage then French president,
Nicholas Sarkozy, to step in and influence where and how his nation voted.
And that's it.
it's pretty stark. Football will occur in a place where workers have lost their lives to build
those stadia, those fields, those terraces for our viewing delight. And we know all of these things,
but the thing we don't know is what do we all do now? We've seen some international federations
start to respond and we will no doubt see more as the clock ticks down to kick off in Qatar
and we'll get to all of that in detail in future episodes. But what we don't
don't know yet is how fans will respond.
What we are sports fans?
That's the thing that if you've gotten to this point,
most of us probably share we are all sports fans.
What are we going to do?
How will we consume?
What is essentially a World Cup soaked in blood?
And we know we're not alone in the conundrum.
It's not just us, Tommy V, me and Johnny Oliver.
You know, our mailbag at men and blazers at gmail.com has been,
that I say, it's men and blazers at gmail.com has been flooded with emails.
We get daily calls on our phone hotline, people asking how they can square this moral circle.
Hey, Raj, Joe here from Orlando, Florida.
Curious what your thoughts are on watching the World Cup, given all the circumstances surrounding, you know, Qatar and how it was awarded, especially with the U.S. men's national team participating.
And the reality is there is no simple answer to this dilemma.
And so we're going to explore it together, dear listener, Tommy Vee, myself and you.
We're going to trace how this game of football, this beautiful, beautiful game of football,
again, it gives me so much joy with its working class roots, its history, has been transformed in England.
Yes, it's become a glitzy bore.
How did a game that fills us with so much meaning on the field become soiled and run and soiled some more?
by the most craven set of self-dealing grotesque since Weist Roryke.
Do not talk about Kendall Roy that way. He is misunderstood.
They actually hear the football team on the show.
Oh, God.
The bigger question is, why would they even want it?
You know, why do these countries want the games when they have none of the infrastructure,
when they don't have the right climate,
when they know all of a sudden we're going to be talking about their human rights record
to the extent that you and I are right now?
And also, the question we really hope to answer is,
how should we together as fans find a position so that we can handle all of it?
How do we think through it?
Do we think through it at all?
Because that's also a position.
What individual positions are we going to be able to find to work our way through?
That last episode is just you and me literally shoving our heads in the sand.
That's how this thing ends.
No, I'm just kidding.
Of course, Rod, I could not be more excited to be a part of this,
to talk through all my layers of grief and anxiety about football,
about sports, about life, with you, with the listener.
So thank you.
It's going to be some journey, Tommy V.
We are just at the beginning.
I'm going to close this pod
the way I close so bloody many,
men in blazes pods by saying one word,
courage, because we're going to need a lot of it.
