America Brings the World Cup to a New Low
America Brings the World Cup to a New Low
Will L.A. taxpayers Be On The Hook For FIFA World Cup Costs?

LA officials haven’t revealed how much is being spent on security for the games. By comparison, the Los Angeles Police Department said this month that security costs for the 2028 Olympics in LA would amount to more than $1 billion.
Daughter of 2028 Epstein Olympics Chair Dreams of Competing in LA — for Israel
We Investigated the Most Corrupt World Cup in History [Video][20mins]
World Cup tickets cost up to $11.5 million — you could get into the last WC for $11. This time FIFA could rake in $13 billion using dynamic pricing, resales, and lax U.S. rules. We found FIFA President Gianni Infantino funneling that money into keeping himself in power.
This new site will tell you how much of a nightmare World Cup traffic is in L.A. in real time
If ICE Shows Up at the World Cup, Essential Service Workers Are Ready to Strike
Don't get played by World Cup ticket scams. Here's what to look out for
Mexico teachers threaten World Cup disruption over pay

>Mexico’s teachers are threatening to disrupt next month’s 2026 FIFA World Cup if their demands for higher pay and reforms are not met. Thousands of teachers marched through Mexico City on Friday, where the opening match of the competition is set to take place.
Jules Boykoff on World Cup and ‘Sportswashing’ [Podcast][27mins]

FIFA, the governing body of association football, concocted a “FIFA Peace Prize”—described as recognizing “individuals for exceptional contributions to peace and unity”—in order to award it to Donald Trump. Alongside revelations of deep-seated corruption—collusion, bribery—involving official bodies and executives, and now ticket prices for this year’s World Cup being called not just excessive but “extortionate,” you might say more folks are “following” football (or soccer) these days, but not necessarily as fans. Sports has always been a big part of news media, but typically segregated into its own section on stats and personalities, ignoring the economic, social and environmental impacts sports have always had. Think about cities enticed into building new arenas with promises of jobs and commerce that never arrive. Or whole communities uprooted for temporary “Olympic Villages.” Jules Boykoff has been following the relationships of sport and society for years now; he’s a former professional soccer player himself, as well as a critic and writer, now teaching political science at Pacific University. He’s author of a number of books, including What Are the Olympics For? (Bristol University Press, 2024). He joins us to discuss his latest: Red Card: The 2026 World Cup, Sportswashing and the FIFA Greed Machine, out now from OR Books.