Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup

Qatar spent $220 billion and allegedly bribed FIFA officials to host a World Cup built by migrant workers who died at a rate of one every two days.

Nov 28, 2022 34:14 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Qatar's $220 billion World Cup gamble exposed the staggering cost of buying global prestige — from alleged FIFA bribery to the deaths of thousands of migrant workers. Tariq Panja of the New York Times traces how the tiny Gulf nation landed the 2022 tournament through lavish lobbying and smoke-filled-room deals, then built eight stadiums on the backs of South Asian laborers trapped by the kafala system. FIFA president Gianni Infantino's surreal "Today I feel Qatari" press conference captured the moral incoherence at the heart of the event. The key takeaway: sport is now the ultimate soft-power currency in the Gulf.

#FIFA corruption #migrant worker rights #kafala system #Gulf soft power #sportswashing #Qatar 2022 #World Cup bidding #One Love protest #labor exploitation #Gianni Infantino #human rights advocacy #labor reform enforcement #Qatar #FIFA #World Cup 2022 #corruption #migrant workers #kafala #soft power #Gulf states #human rights #sports diplomacy #One Love armband #beer ban

How Qatar, a tiny energy-rich Gulf state, secured the 2022 FIFA World Cup through lavish lobbying and alleged bribery, then built the infrastructure on the backs of migrant workers under the kafala system — thousands of whom died — and how the world responded.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a TikTok advertisement emphasizing the platform's role in connecting curious communities through science, history, art, and everyday discovery. Sabrina Tavernisi transitions into the show's intro, setting up the World Cup as the lens through which the episode will be told.

  • With stadium noise and broadcaster clips setting the scene, Sabrina Tavernisi places the 2022 World Cup in its full global context: the single largest sporting event on earth, one that is expected to reach more than half the world's population. She flags immediately that the tournament has been shadowed by more than a decade of controversy, rooted in one simple, startling fact — the host is Qatar, a country the size of Connecticut. The stage is set for a reckoning with how that came to pass.

  • Tariq Panja describes the surreal experience of arriving in Qatar for the World Cup: a gleaming airport, a newly built metro designed specifically to shuttle fans between compact stadiums, and an apartment block where he and his New York Times colleagues are the very first guests. The streets are new, the buildings are new, the air smells of fresh construction. It is, Panja says, like being on a movie set — and that is precisely the point. Qatar has built an entire country from scratch to host one month of football.

  • Qatar had long promised that beer would be available at World Cup venues, just as at every previous tournament — a significant concession for a conservative Muslim country. But in the final days before kickoff, the Emir's brother went for a stroll around the stadium perimeter, took one look at the red Budweiser branding, and reportedly asked for it to be moved. Within 48 hours, alcohol was banned outright at the stadiums. Fans who had spent thousands of dollars on flights and accommodation arrived to find a dry World Cup, with no prior warning. It was the opening signal of a tournament that would be defined by controversy.

  • The backstory begins in 2009, when FIFA opened the bidding for the 2022 World Cup and Qatar threw its name in. Nobody took it seriously. The country ranked in the hundreds globally as a soccer-playing nation, had no stadiums worth the name, baked under temperatures that made outdoor football in June and July dangerous, and criminalized homosexuality. Building the required eight stadiums alone would cost over $200 billion. Yet Qatar had something that almost trumped every practical objection: the money to make the bid and the will to pursue it. Tariq Panja explains that Qatar wanted something no amount of wealth could simply purchase — a seat at the very top table of global prestige.

  • Tariq Panja zooms out to explain Qatar's true calculus. In the Gulf, sport has become the currency of soft power: the UAE's Emirates airline plasters itself across European club jerseys, and Manchester City is owned by the brother of the UAE's ruler. But Qatar's World Cup bid represents a decisive escalation. There is only one World Cup — it is the most-watched event in human history — and now Qatar has it. Not Saudi Arabia. Not the UAE. Not Bahrain. That fact alone is worth the billions spent and the years of controversy endured.

  • Qatar's public bid was lavish by any measure: more money than any rival spent on presentations and sponsorships, a star lineup of former footballers led by Zinedine Zidane paid millions just to put his name on the effort, and repeated VIP visits to Doha for the 22 men who would cast the decisive votes. But Panja makes clear that the real work happened in private. Smoke-filled rooms, private dinners, quiet conversations that amounted to a single question: what can we do for you? The result, when the votes were counted, was a shock win — but the circumstances behind it would unravel over the following decade.

  • The moment the result was announced, suspicions crystallized. Two voting members had already been expelled before the vote for offering to sell their ballots to undercover journalists — a sign of just how biddable the committee was. Then the allegations multiplied: a whistleblower emerged claiming three members were offered cash by Qatar; Michel Platini, the former UEFA president, was detained by French police in connection with the investigation; and a US Department of Justice indictment explicitly named three South American FIFA officials who received bribes to vote for Qatar. Panja's verdict is damning: it is the closest any major authority has come to confirming that the vote was bought. Of the 22 men who made that decision, most have since faced accusations, bans, or criminal indictments.

  • Winning the bid was just the beginning. Qatar had to rebuild itself as a country — seven stadiums, hundreds of miles of roads, a brand-new metro system, a port, hotels, sewage systems — with a domestic population so small it could be seated in the World Cup final stadium four times over. The solution was an extraordinary influx of migrant workers, mostly from Nepal, India, Bangladesh, and parts of West Africa, drawn to Qatar by economic desperation. Qatar's population nearly doubled between 2009 and 2022, a surge driven entirely by this workforce. At the peak of construction, 85 to 90 percent of the country's total population were migrant workers. They earned less than $10 a day, worked six days a week, and labored for 8 to 10 hours in temperatures that could exceed 50 degrees Celsius.

  • The human toll of Qatar's building frenzy was staggering. Workers described overcrowded dormitories with no air conditioning in brutal heat, seizures on worksites, and young men found dead in their beds — most from cardiac arrest or respiratory failure. The Guardian counted 6,500 deaths among migrant workers since 2010, with Nepalese workers dying at a rate of one every two days at the height of construction. Beneath the death toll lay a structural trap: the kafala system, which legally bound each worker to a single employer. If a worker was underpaid or abused, he had no recourse and no exit — he couldn't change jobs or leave Qatar without that employer's written permission. It was, Panja says, a system designed to produce exactly the exploitation the world came to witness.

  • As the tournament approached, the global conversation about Qatar's human rights record — migrant labor abuses and the criminalization of homosexuality — grew louder. Human rights organizations including Amnesty International called on football associations to act. Nations like Denmark, Germany, and England faced intense domestic pressure to make a stand. Seven European countries agreed their captains would wear rainbow 'One Love' armbands. It seemed like a modest, if symbolic, gesture. FIFA immediately made clear it was not: the organization threatened sporting sanctions against any captain who wore one. The seven nations met, deliberated, and collectively caved. Not even a wristband of solidarity was permitted.

  • The scrutiny did produce results. Qatar became one of the first Gulf states to formally abolish the kafala system, announced a $275 monthly minimum wage, and introduced wage insurance against theft. But enforcement of these changes was, in Panja's word, patchy — the rules existed on paper without reliable application on the ground, and workers continued to suffer. Qatar's officials grew increasingly bitter: they argued they were doing more than any regional neighbor, and felt their genuine reforms were being ignored. The Emir addressed lawmakers saying no sporting host had ever faced such attacks; ministers alleged racism was driving the coverage. Qatar had spent $220 billion and expected gratitude. What it got was front pages about dead workers.

  • The most surreal moment of the most controversial World Cup in history arrived before a ball had been kicked. FIFA president Gianni Infantino assembled the world's press and delivered a 90-minute monologue that left journalists speechless. He declared, in sequence, that he felt Qatari, gay, and a migrant worker. He then explained why: he had been bullied as a child in Switzerland for being ginger-haired and the son of Italian immigrants. He pivoted from there to a sweeping assault on Western critics, arguing that European nations — given their history of colonialism — had no standing to lecture anyone about human rights for the next 3,000 years. Tariq Panja, who has covered FIFA press conferences for two decades, said he had seen nothing like it.

  • As the conversation draws toward its close, Panja crystallizes the entire episode into a single, devastating image. Qatar has pulled off the logistics. The world is watching. The stadiums are full. The most famous athletes alive are on the pitch. For this one month, Qatar gets to be the backdrop of the world's most-watched spectacle. And that is precisely what Qatar is counting on: that you will remember this as the place where Messi lifted the trophy — not as the place where 6,500 workers were buried. Whether sport can perform that kind of moral laundering is the open question that will define Qatar's legacy for decades.

  • After Tariq Panja signs off, Sabrina Tavernisi grounds the abstract stakes of the episode in fresh viewership data. More than 15 million Americans watched the US play England, setting a new record for the most-viewed men's soccer match in US history. Nearly 90,000 people packed the stands for Argentina vs Mexico — the largest World Cup crowd in almost 30 years. Whatever the controversies, the world was watching in record numbers.

  • The episode's mid-outro sponsor block features three distinct reads: Planned Parenthood Federation of America urging donations to defend reproductive healthcare access following federal defunding; Rippling AI pitching an HR and workforce management product built on live company data; and IBM promoting its enterprise AI integration services, claiming to have reduced costs by millions and freed thousands of hours of employee time through automation.

  • In the episode's news-in-brief segment, Sabrina Tavernisi reports on a wave of anti-COVID protests sweeping China, triggered by a fatal fire in a Chinese province where victims may have been prevented from escaping by pandemic lockdown measures. The protests spread to university campuses, where students held vigils and raised blank white paper as mute protest, and to Shanghai, where police deployed pepper spray. By Sunday, authorities in at least eight cities including Beijing were struggling to contain demonstrations. Most remarkably, crowds called openly for President Xi Jinping to resign — an unprecedented rebuke of Communist Party authority.

  • Sabrina Tavernisi reads out the episode's production team credits — producers, editors, composers, and engineers — before signing off. The final sponsor message is from Bank of America Private Bank, positioning itself as a wealth management partner for high-ambition clients and noting its status as the official bank of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

kafala system
A Gulf labor sponsorship framework that legally ties a migrant worker to a single employer, preventing them from changing jobs or leaving the country without that employer's permission.
FIFA
Fédération Internationale de Football Association — the global governing body for soccer that oversees the World Cup and other international tournaments.
CONMEBOL
Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol — the governing body for soccer in South America, whose members sit on FIFA's executive committee and vote on World Cup hosting bids.
soft power
The use of cultural, diplomatic, or economic influence — rather than military or coercive force — to shape international perception and extend a nation's global standing. Here used to describe Gulf states' use of sport to enhance prestige.
One Love armband
A rainbow-colored captain's armband several European national teams planned to wear at the 2022 World Cup as a statement of support for LGBTQ+ inclusion, before FIFA threatened sanctions and the teams withdrew.
UEFA
Union of European Football Associations — the governing body for soccer in Europe; its former president Michel Platini was detained in connection with the investigation into Qatar's World Cup bid.
executive committee
FIFA's 22-member decision-making body that at the time voted to award hosting rights for the World Cup; many of its members have since been accused, banned, or indicted on corruption charges.
sportswashing
The practice of using high-profile sporting events or sponsorships to improve the international image of a country or regime, distracting from or rehabilitating a poor human rights record.
Hamad International Airport
Qatar's main international airport in Doha, heavily expanded and modernized as part of the country's World Cup infrastructure overhaul.
Emir
The title of Qatar's head of state; Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani is the Emir of Qatar. His brother's objection to Budweiser branding led to the last-minute alcohol ban at stadiums.
biddable
Readily open to being influenced, bought, or persuaded; used here to describe FIFA executive committee members susceptible to bribery.
maligned
Spoken about in an unfairly critical or damaging way; Qatar officials used the term to describe how they felt they were being treated by international media despite their reforms.
patchy
Uneven or inconsistent in quality or application; used to describe Qatar's enforcement of its own labor reforms, suggesting the rules existed on paper but were not reliably applied.
indictment
A formal charge issued by a grand jury or prosecutor alleging that a person has committed a crime; used here in reference to US Department of Justice charges against FIFA officials connected to the Qatar vote.

Chapter 2 · 00:45

Setting the Scene: The World Cup Begins

With stadium noise and broadcaster clips setting the scene, Sabrina Tavernisi places the 2022 World Cup in its full global context: the single largest sporting event on earth, one that is expected to reach more than half the world's population. She flags immediately that the tournament has been shadowed by more than a decade of controversy, rooted in one simple, startling fact — the host is Qatar, a country the size of Connecticut. The stage is set for a reckoning with how that came to pass.

Claims made here

By the time the 2022 FIFA World Cup finishes, more than half the world's population is expected to have watched it.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Chapter 3 · 02:00

Arrival in Qatar: A Country Built from Scratch

Tariq Panja describes the surreal experience of arriving in Qatar for the World Cup: a gleaming airport, a newly built metro designed specifically to shuttle fans between compact stadiums, and an apartment block where he and his New York Times colleagues are the very first guests. The streets are new, the buildings are new, the air smells of fresh construction. It is, Panja says, like being on a movie set — and that is precisely the point. Qatar has built an entire country from scratch to host one month of football.

Chapter 4 · 03:40

The Beer Ban: Qatar's First Major Controversy

Qatar had long promised that beer would be available at World Cup venues, just as at every previous tournament — a significant concession for a conservative Muslim country. But in the final days before kickoff, the Emir's brother went for a stroll around the stadium perimeter, took one look at the red Budweiser branding, and reportedly asked for it to be moved. Within 48 hours, alcohol was banned outright at the stadiums. Fans who had spent thousands of dollars on flights and accommodation arrived to find a dry World Cup, with no prior warning. It was the opening signal of a tournament that would be defined by controversy.

Sports
Beer Banned 48 Hours Before Kickoff

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

FIFA promised alcohol at stadiums. Qatar agreed. Then, a week before kickoff, the Emir's brother went for a stroll, didn't like the red Budweiser tents, and 48 hours later the World Cup was dry. No warning. Fans had already bought their flights.

Chapter 5 · 05:09

Why Qatar Even Wanted the World Cup

The backstory begins in 2009, when FIFA opened the bidding for the 2022 World Cup and Qatar threw its name in. Nobody took it seriously. The country ranked in the hundreds globally as a soccer-playing nation, had no stadiums worth the name, baked under temperatures that made outdoor football in June and July dangerous, and criminalized homosexuality. Building the required eight stadiums alone would cost over $200 billion. Yet Qatar had something that almost trumped every practical objection: the money to make the bid and the will to pursue it. Tariq Panja explains that Qatar wanted something no amount of wealth could simply purchase — a seat at the very top table of global prestige.

Claims made here

Qatar ranked in the hundreds as a soccer-playing nation when it bid to host the 2022 World Cup.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Qatar needed to spend over $200 billion to build the 8 stadiums and infrastructure required to host the World Cup.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Sports
Qatar Wins the World Cup Bid — But How?

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

Qatar ranked in the hundreds as a soccer-playing nation and had almost no infrastructure — yet it beat the US, South Korea, Japan, and Australia to host the 2022 World Cup. The win made no logical sense except as the opening move in a billion-dollar soft-power game.

Chapter 6 · 08:44

Soft Power in the Gulf: Qatar's Real Motivation

Tariq Panja zooms out to explain Qatar's true calculus. In the Gulf, sport has become the currency of soft power: the UAE's Emirates airline plasters itself across European club jerseys, and Manchester City is owned by the brother of the UAE's ruler. But Qatar's World Cup bid represents a decisive escalation. There is only one World Cup — it is the most-watched event in human history — and now Qatar has it. Not Saudi Arabia. Not the UAE. Not Bahrain. That fact alone is worth the billions spent and the years of controversy endured.

Sports
Sport as Gulf Soft Power

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

In the Gulf, owning a Premier League club or slapping an airline logo on European jerseys is standard soft power. Qatar raised the stakes by landing the World Cup itself — the one prize no neighbor can replicate. That is the entire point.

Chapter 7 · 10:21

Winning the Bid: The Public Campaign and the Smoke-Filled Rooms

Qatar's public bid was lavish by any measure: more money than any rival spent on presentations and sponsorships, a star lineup of former footballers led by Zinedine Zidane paid millions just to put his name on the effort, and repeated VIP visits to Doha for the 22 men who would cast the decisive votes. But Panja makes clear that the real work happened in private. Smoke-filled rooms, private dinners, quiet conversations that amounted to a single question: what can we do for you? The result, when the votes were counted, was a shock win — but the circumstances behind it would unravel over the following decade.

Claims made here

Two FIFA executive committee members were expelled for offering to sell their votes to undercover reporters before the World Cup vote.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Sports
How Qatar Really Won the Bid

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

Qatar hired Zinedine Zidane for millions to front its bid, spent more than any rival on public lobbying, and then did the real work in private — quietly convincing 22 FIFA executives through means that were never meant to see daylight. Most of those executives have since been accused, banned, or indicted.

Chapter 8 · 13:00

The Corruption Allegations: Bribery and US Indictments

The moment the result was announced, suspicions crystallized. Two voting members had already been expelled before the vote for offering to sell their ballots to undercover journalists — a sign of just how biddable the committee was. Then the allegations multiplied: a whistleblower emerged claiming three members were offered cash by Qatar; Michel Platini, the former UEFA president, was detained by French police in connection with the investigation; and a US Department of Justice indictment explicitly named three South American FIFA officials who received bribes to vote for Qatar. Panja's verdict is damning: it is the closest any major authority has come to confirming that the vote was bought. Of the 22 men who made that decision, most have since faced accusations, bans, or criminal indictments.

Claims made here

A US Department of Justice indictment stated that three South American FIFA executive committee members received bribes to vote for Qatar.

Tariq Panja US Department of Justice indictment related to soccer corruption

Most of the FIFA executive committee that voted to award Qatar the World Cup have since been accused, banned, or indicted for corruption or wrongdoing.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Chapter 9 · 15:00

Building the Infrastructure: An Army of Migrant Workers

Winning the bid was just the beginning. Qatar had to rebuild itself as a country — seven stadiums, hundreds of miles of roads, a brand-new metro system, a port, hotels, sewage systems — with a domestic population so small it could be seated in the World Cup final stadium four times over. The solution was an extraordinary influx of migrant workers, mostly from Nepal, India, Bangladesh, and parts of West Africa, drawn to Qatar by economic desperation. Qatar's population nearly doubled between 2009 and 2022, a surge driven entirely by this workforce. At the peak of construction, 85 to 90 percent of the country's total population were migrant workers. They earned less than $10 a day, worked six days a week, and labored for 8 to 10 hours in temperatures that could exceed 50 degrees Celsius.

Claims made here

About 85 to 90 percent of Qatar's population is made up of migrant workers.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Migrant workers in Qatar earned less than $10 a day and worked 8 to 10 hours a day, six days a week in temperatures up to 50 degrees Celsius.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Sports
Building a Country in the Desert

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

Qatar had to build seven stadiums, hundreds of miles of roads, a metro, hotels, sewage systems, and a port from near scratch — all for a 30-day tournament. To fill the labor gap in a country where every citizen could fit in the final stadium four times over, Qatar turned to migrant workers.

Chapter 10 · 19:55

The Human Cost: Deaths, Exploitation, and the Kafala System

The human toll of Qatar's building frenzy was staggering. Workers described overcrowded dormitories with no air conditioning in brutal heat, seizures on worksites, and young men found dead in their beds — most from cardiac arrest or respiratory failure. The Guardian counted 6,500 deaths among migrant workers since 2010, with Nepalese workers dying at a rate of one every two days at the height of construction. Beneath the death toll lay a structural trap: the kafala system, which legally bound each worker to a single employer. If a worker was underpaid or abused, he had no recourse and no exit — he couldn't change jobs or leave Qatar without that employer's written permission. It was, Panja says, a system designed to produce exactly the exploitation the world came to witness.

Claims made here

Nepalese migrants in Qatar were dying at a rate of one every two days at the height of World Cup construction.

Tariq Panja The Guardian

A Guardian report found that 6,500 workers had died in Qatar since 2010.

Tariq Panja The Guardian

Society & Culture
The Kafala System: Trapped in Qatar

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Society & Culture

The kafala system tied every migrant worker to a single employer — no switching jobs, no leaving the country without permission. Workers who were underpaid had no one to complain to and nowhere to go. It was legal, systemic labor bondage in the world's wealthiest country.

Chapter 11 · 23:35

International Backlash: Human Rights Groups, European Nations, and the One Love Armband

As the tournament approached, the global conversation about Qatar's human rights record — migrant labor abuses and the criminalization of homosexuality — grew louder. Human rights organizations including Amnesty International called on football associations to act. Nations like Denmark, Germany, and England faced intense domestic pressure to make a stand. Seven European countries agreed their captains would wear rainbow 'One Love' armbands. It seemed like a modest, if symbolic, gesture. FIFA immediately made clear it was not: the organization threatened sporting sanctions against any captain who wore one. The seven nations met, deliberated, and collectively caved. Not even a wristband of solidarity was permitted.

Chapter 12 · 25:30

Qatar's Reforms and Its Sense of Grievance

The scrutiny did produce results. Qatar became one of the first Gulf states to formally abolish the kafala system, announced a $275 monthly minimum wage, and introduced wage insurance against theft. But enforcement of these changes was, in Panja's word, patchy — the rules existed on paper without reliable application on the ground, and workers continued to suffer. Qatar's officials grew increasingly bitter: they argued they were doing more than any regional neighbor, and felt their genuine reforms were being ignored. The Emir addressed lawmakers saying no sporting host had ever faced such attacks; ministers alleged racism was driving the coverage. Qatar had spent $220 billion and expected gratitude. What it got was front pages about dead workers.

Claims made here

Qatar was one of the first, if not the first, country in the Gulf region to abolish the kafala system.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Qatar introduced a minimum wage of $275 per month for workers under international pressure.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Qatar spent $220 billion on the 2022 World Cup — more than any country has spent on any sporting event including the Olympics.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Government
Qatar's Reforms: Too Little, Too Patchy

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Government

Under pressure, Qatar abolished the kafala system, set a $275 monthly minimum wage, and introduced wage-protection insurance. But enforcement has been patchy at best. Qatar argues it is doing more than any neighbor — and feels bitterly misunderstood.

Chapter 13 · 28:10

Gianni Infantino's Jaw-Dropping Press Conference

The most surreal moment of the most controversial World Cup in history arrived before a ball had been kicked. FIFA president Gianni Infantino assembled the world's press and delivered a 90-minute monologue that left journalists speechless. He declared, in sequence, that he felt Qatari, gay, and a migrant worker. He then explained why: he had been bullied as a child in Switzerland for being ginger-haired and the son of Italian immigrants. He pivoted from there to a sweeping assault on Western critics, arguing that European nations — given their history of colonialism — had no standing to lecture anyone about human rights for the next 3,000 years. Tariq Panja, who has covered FIFA press conferences for two decades, said he had seen nothing like it.

Sports
Gianni Infantino's Jaw-Dropping Press Conference

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

FIFA president Gianni Infantino stood up before the world's media and declared he felt Qatari, gay, and a migrant worker — then compared his experience of childhood bullying as a ginger-haired kid in Switzerland to the persecution of LGBTQ people and migrant laborers in the Gulf. It lasted 90 minutes.

Sports
Messi's Goal vs Ram Prasad's Life

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

Qatar's bet is that you will remember a Lionel Messi goal in a gleaming stadium — not the name of the Nepali worker who died building it. Whether sport can launder that kind of history is the most uncomfortable question hanging over the entire tournament.

Chapter 14 · 31:05

Qatar's Gamble: Will the Football Overshadow the Deaths?

As the conversation draws toward its close, Panja crystallizes the entire episode into a single, devastating image. Qatar has pulled off the logistics. The world is watching. The stadiums are full. The most famous athletes alive are on the pitch. For this one month, Qatar gets to be the backdrop of the world's most-watched spectacle. And that is precisely what Qatar is counting on: that you will remember this as the place where Messi lifted the trophy — not as the place where 6,500 workers were buried. Whether sport can perform that kind of moral laundering is the open question that will define Qatar's legacy for decades.

Chapter 15 · 33:05

Outro: World Cup Records and Post-Interview Update

After Tariq Panja signs off, Sabrina Tavernisi grounds the abstract stakes of the episode in fresh viewership data. More than 15 million Americans watched the US play England, setting a new record for the most-viewed men's soccer match in US history. Nearly 90,000 people packed the stands for Argentina vs Mexico — the largest World Cup crowd in almost 30 years. Whatever the controversies, the world was watching in record numbers.

Claims made here

More than 15 million Americans watched the US vs England World Cup match, setting a record for the most-viewed men's soccer match in US history.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Nearly 90,000 people attended the Argentina vs Mexico World Cup match, the largest crowd at a World Cup in nearly three decades.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Chapter 18 · 37:30

Credits & Closing Sponsor

Sabrina Tavernisi reads out the episode's production team credits — producers, editors, composers, and engineers — before signing off. The final sponsor message is from Bank of America Private Bank, positioning itself as a wealth management partner for high-ambition clients and noting its status as the official bank of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

Sports
Gianni Infantino's Jaw-Dropping Press Conference

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

FIFA president Gianni Infantino stood up before the world's media and declared he felt Qatari, gay, and a migrant worker — then compared his experience of childhood bullying as a ginger-haired kid in Switzerland to the persecution of LGBTQ people and migrant laborers in the Gulf. It lasted 90 minutes.

Sports
How Qatar Really Won the Bid

Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup · Nov 28, 2022 Sports

Qatar hired Zinedine Zidane for millions to front its bid, spent more than any rival on public lobbying, and then did the real work in private — quietly convincing 22 FIFA executives through means that were never meant to see daylight. Most of those executives have since been accused, banned, or indicted.

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3 / 15 cited (20%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

By the time the 2022 FIFA World Cup finishes, more than half the world's population is expected to have watched it.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Qatar ranked in the hundreds as a soccer-playing nation when it bid to host the 2022 World Cup.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Qatar needed to spend over $200 billion to build the 8 stadiums and infrastructure required to host the World Cup.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Two FIFA executive committee members were expelled for offering to sell their votes to undercover reporters before the World Cup vote.

Tariq Panja no source cited

A US Department of Justice indictment stated that three South American FIFA executive committee members received bribes to vote for Qatar.

Tariq Panja US Department of Justice indictment related to soccer corruption

Most of the FIFA executive committee that voted to award Qatar the World Cup have since been accused, banned, or indicted for corruption or wrongdoing.

Tariq Panja no source cited

About 85 to 90 percent of Qatar's population is made up of migrant workers.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Migrant workers in Qatar earned less than $10 a day and worked 8 to 10 hours a day, six days a week in temperatures up to 50 degrees Celsius.

Tariq Panja no source cited

A Guardian report found that 6,500 workers had died in Qatar since 2010.

Tariq Panja The Guardian

Nepalese migrants in Qatar were dying at a rate of one every two days at the height of World Cup construction.

Tariq Panja The Guardian

Qatar introduced a minimum wage of $275 per month for workers under international pressure.

Tariq Panja no source cited

Qatar spent $220 billion on the 2022 World Cup — more than any country has spent on any sporting event including the Olympics.

Tariq Panja no source cited

More than 15 million Americans watched the US vs England World Cup match, setting a record for the most-viewed men's soccer match in US history.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Nearly 90,000 people attended the Argentina vs Mexico World Cup match, the largest crowd at a World Cup in nearly three decades.

Sabrina Tavernisi no source cited

Qatar was one of the first, if not the first, country in the Gulf region to abolish the kafala system.

Tariq Panja no source cited

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