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Sports Jun 02, 2026

US World Cup 2026: When Does the Tournament Really Arrive?

The 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the US, Canada, and Mexico, is nearing its kickoff. However, for m…
The World Cup's Slow Build-Up Organizationally speaking, the 2026 World Cup began on 13 June 2018, when then-Fifa general secretary Fatma Samoura sternly instructed the delegates to cast their vote in a cavernous conference hall in Moscow. Yet mere days away from the tournament’s kickoff in Mexico City, it doesn’t really feel like the thing is here yet. At least, not in the US. And not in New York, the host city for the final. Player Perspectives on the World Cup Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie, who will probably make up much of the United States men’s national team midfield this summer, were 19 when their home country was named as a co-host. That’s when they knew that their nation, for which both men had made their senior debuts on the same day seven months earlier, had qualified automatically as one of the three co-hosts. “For me, it started to feel real probably after [this past] season finished, because we had a lot of pressure at our club level,” said McKennie. “So I wanted to just finish my season off with Juventus and then, after that … I think it’ll start to hit me more. Obviously, whenever you get the message that you’re named to the roster, that’s another big moment where you realize, OK, it’s starting.” The Marketing and Branding of the World Cup The most evidence of the impending tournament can be found in the various businesses that sponsor the thing. Shop for a bucket of paint or a rake at a hardware chain and you may stumble on some signage, if you’re paying attention. Pharmacies have plush mascots for sale among other officially licensed trinkets. “To see all the different branding and things that are being put up around the country has made it that much more real in the past couple weeks,” said the US captain, Tim Ream. Anticipation and Reality Weighing anticipation and the present is a tricky balance for players to strike. They are expected to live day to day, practice to practice, game to game. And for the US, absent a qualification process that stretched over a year or two, they lacked the usual signage that demarcates the cycle. “I think I kind of felt it on the horizon,” said Christian Pulisic. “Obviously, you’re focusing on what you’re doing at your club, but I’d say once I got here and kind of was with the team and felt these fans and support and buzz around the World Cup, is when I really started to feel it.”
#World Cup 2026 #US Soccer #FIFA
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Sports Jun 02, 2026

France's World Cup 2026 Preview: Mbappé's Quest for Glory and Deschamps's Final Act

France enters the 2026 World Cup as one of the tournament favorites with a star-studded squad led b…
The French Football Legacy France boasts an impressive World Cup history with 16 appearances, winning the prestigious trophy in 1998 and 2018. The nation sits proudly at the top of the FIFA world rankings and possesses some of football's most remarkable records, including Just Fontaine's 13 goals as the top scorer and Hugo Lloris's 20 appearances as the most capped player. Mbappé's Record-Breaking Campaign The Real Madrid forward needs just two goals to surpass Just Fontaine's record of 13 World Cup goals for France. After a blistering season where he scored 42 goals and contributed seven assists in 44 matches for Madrid, Mbappé will have his eye on the Golden Ball. Despite occasional inconsistency at previous World Cups, his sheer presence and quality could drive France to glory in 2026. France's Attacking Wealth France possesses an embarrassment of riches in attack, headlined by Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembélé, who has added a second Champions League title to his resume. Young talents like Desire Doue (21), Michael Olise, Bradley Barcola, Marcus Thuram, Rayan Cherki, and Jean-Philippe Mateta provide depth and versatility. This collection of talent presents both a strength and potential challenge as egos could clash in such a star-studded lineup. Defensive Fortitude Many believe World Cups are won by teams with the best defenses, and France certainly fits that description. Arsenal's William Saliba provides a solid foundation in the center, supported by Dayot Upamecano's pace, Jules Kounde's world-class right-back skills, and the excellent left-back options of Theo Hernandez and Lucas Digne. The addition of uncapped goalkeeper Robin Risser from Lens adds depth to an already strong defensive unit. Deschamps's Final Chapter Didier Deschamps, the only Frenchman to have lifted the trophy as both player and manager, will step down after this tournament. The 57-year-old has faced criticism for his conservative approach, but he remains focused on results. His biggest selection challenge was omitting midfielder Eduardo Camavinga, who had a disappointing season with Real Madrid. Deschamps will be desperate to secure a second title as manager to cement his legacy. Group Stage Challenges France faces a challenging Group I with matches against Senegal, Iraq, and Norway. The opener against Senegal (ranked 14th) will be particularly tricky, as France is haunted by their 2002 defeat to the African side. Iraq (57th) should present an easier prospect, while Norway and Erling Haaland await in the final group game, having emerged from qualifying with a perfect record. France's World Cup Schedule June 16: France vs Senegal (East Rutherford, New Jersey), 3pm (19:00 GMT) June 22: France vs Iraq (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), 5pm (21:00 GMT) June 26: Norway vs France (Boston, Massachusetts), 3pm (19:00 GMT) Tournament Prediction Al Jazeera predicts France will be runners-up if they face Spain in the final, but champions otherwise. While France possesses immense talent, Spain might have too much quality, coherence, and belief to overcome the French in a potential final showdown. The French Squad Goalkeepers: Mike Maignan (AC Milan), Robin Risser (Racing Lens), Brice Samba (Stade Rennais) Defenders: Lucas Digne (Aston Villa), Malo Gusto (Chelsea), Lucas Hernandez (PSG), Theo Hernandez (Al Hilal), Ibrahima Konate (Liverpool), Jules Kounde (Barcelona), Maxence Lacroix (Crystal Palace), William Saliba (Arsenal), Dayot Upamecano (Bayern Munich) Midfielders: N'Golo Kante (Fenerbahce), Manu Kone (Roma), Adrien Rabiot (AC Milan), Aurelien Tchouameni (Real Madrid), Warren Zaire-Emery (PSG) Forwards: Maghnes Akliouche (Monaco), Bradley Barcola (PSG), Rayan Cherki (Manchester City), Ousmane Dembele (PSG), Desire Doue (PSG), Jean-Philippe Mateta (Crystal Palace), Kylian Mbappe (Real Madrid), Michael Olise (Bayern Munich), Marcus Thuram (Inter Milan)
#France #World Cup 2026 #Kylian Mbappé
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Entertainment Jun 02, 2026

Rosa Rankin-Gee’s ‘My Only Boy’ Explores the Dark Intersection of Gig Economy Exploitation and Political Dystopia

Rosa Rankin-Gee’s latest novel, My Only Boy, presents a chillingly plausible near-future England go…
A Claustrophobic Vision of Near-Future EnglandRosa Rankin-Gee’s highly anticipated follow-up to Dreamland (2021), titled My Only Boy, delivers a darkly funny and politically charged dystopia. The novel paints a terrifyingly familiar picture of an England that has just elected a far-right populist government. For the reader, the gap between current reality and the novel's fiction feels increasingly suffocating, making the narrative function as both a gripping story and a stark warning.The Exploitative Mechanics of 'Gigr'At the heart of the narrative is Elle, the communications director for a gig-economy behemoth aptly named Gigr. The company connects desperate workers with immediate shift labor. The novel opens with Elle managing the reputational fallout of a worker's suicide—a tragic but common occurrence, as public sector wages no longer cover basic survival. Gigr's algorithms ruthlessly calculate the absolute minimum a desperate person will accept to pay for emergency healthcare or food, highlighting a brutal new era of automated exploitation.Moral Decay and the Human Cost of Algorithmic LaborThe narrative engine is driven by a tangled web of romance and corporate corruption. Elle, historically secure in her lesbian identity, begins a confusing romance with Ed, a newly famous gay author, while simultaneously engaging in a questionable affair with her much younger subordinate, Luisa. This power dynamic forces the reader to grapple with Elle’s increasingly loathsome, yet understandable, moral compromises. As environmental degradation worsens and white-collar crime deepens, the characters survive on a brittle diet of dark humor, alcohol, and repression.Setting: A near-future England plagued by extreme weather, violent crime, and massive wealth inequality.Core Conflict: Elle's internal justifications for violating labor laws versus her crumbling personal relationships.Thematic Tone: Cynical, flippant, and darkly comedic, contrasting sharply with the grim reality of the plot.The Enduring Relevance of Political DystopiaWhile the novel's final third occasionally struggles to balance its cynical humor with the intricate realities of corporate crime, Rankin-Gee’s sharp prose remains a standout. My Only Boy serves as a brilliant, albeit unsettling, mirror to our current socio-economic anxieties. It predicts a future where human rights are continually eroded by corporate efficiency, cementing its place as a vital read for understanding the psychological toll of modern political despair.
#Rosa Rankin-Gee #My Only Boy #Dystopian Fiction
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Entertainment Jun 02, 2026

George Michael's Complex Legacy Explored in New Critical Biography

Sathnam Sanghera's new book 'Tonight the Music Seems So Loud' offers a critical examination of Geor…
A Critical Portrait of George MichaelIn 1998, George Michael was arrested for public lewdness in an LA lavatory, an incident that finally led the singer to publicly come out. The following day, Sathnam Sanghera found himself unable to leave his room at university: the doorway had been mockingly plastered with tabloid newspaper headlines – "ZIP ME UP BEFORE YOU GO-GO!" – by fellow students aware of his longstanding fandom. As a writer, Sanghera is best known for a series of award-winning books on the British empire, which he calls his "specialist subject". Judging by Tonight the Music Seems So Loud – not a biography so much as a miscellany, a set of themed essays that tend to digress in all kinds of intriguing directions – the life and work of one Georgios Panayiotou runs imperialism and its legacy a very close second.The Complex Legacy of a Pop IconIt is an unashamedly partisan book, although not an uncritical one. Sanghera is as alive to Michael's personal and professional failings (whether the naffness of some of his early work as one half of Wham! or his high-handed treatment of the duo's other half, Andrew Ridgeley) as he is in love with his artistic triumphs. These, of course, range from Careless Whisper and Wham!'s annually inescapable Last Christmas to the 1996 solo masterpiece Older, a peculiar and peculiarly effective cocktail of raw grief at the Aids-related death of his lover Anselmo Feleppa and unrepentant horniness.The Evolution of Critical ReceptionSanghera's love for his subject is evidently sharpened by the opprobrium of others. Indeed if the book has a flaw, it's that the author is old enough to remember an era when George Michael was deemed insufferably uncool by some arbiters of taste (incredibly, when Wham! performed at a 1984 benefit show for striking miners, the only mainstream pop act to show support for the cause, they were received stone-faced by the audience and savaged by the music press for their trouble), and thus has a tendency to underestimate how much both he and his music have been critically re-evaluated in the 21st century.The Artistic Journey of George MichaelHe says one of the spurs to write the book was his belief that "most truly popular music is not generally deemed worthy of serious analysis and George Michael's music most certainly is not". That might have been true once, but certainly not of late: when he died, this newspaper alone ran six features by critics analysing different aspects of his music. "He sang so exquisitely about the marrow of life, about the vital, corporeal things", wrote one, which definitely doesn't amount to taking George Michael insufficiently seriously.double quotation markEven as he skinned up in front of journalists and discussed his drug use and sex life, he was concealing the extent of the addictions that eventually killed himFamily Background and Cultural IdentitySanghera is very good on the climate of homophobia in the 80s, which might have given any gay public figure serious qualms about coming out, and fascinating on Michael's family background: how growing up embedded in north London's Greek Cypriot community impacted on everything from Wham!'s image – not camp, Sanghera suggests, but "the vision of two children of immigrants imagining a kind of glamour they had not actually experienced before" – to his work ethic and control freakery. His dad made good in England by working exceptionally hard, running such a tight ship at his restaurant that he summarily fired his only son for messing up the drinks orders. The fact that the same son went on to hire 12 different saxophonists before finding one that could play the solo on Careless Whisper to his satisfaction doesn't come as a huge surprise.The Perfectionist and Contradictory ArtistThis my-way-or-the-highway perfectionism could yield hugely impressive results – Careless Whisper's sax hook may well be the most famous in pop history – but it could equally lead to intransigence and self-sabotage. Michael worked incredibly hard to transform himself from a member of a teen pop band into a more adult-facing solo artist, but having sold a staggering 25m copies of his 1987 solo debut Faith, he refused to promote its follow-up Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1, or even make videos for its singles: a better album than its predecessor, it achieved only a fraction of its sales as a result. It was evidence of a deeply contradictory nature that occasionally has Sanghera throwing up his hands in bewilderment.The Public and Private Faces of George MichaelMichael was a polymath, keen to be duly credited as the sole singer, writer, producer and musician on a succession of tracks, but also had a weird habit of talking down his abilities, claiming he couldn't play instruments he was perfectly capable of playing. He was a Stakhanovite who increasingly worked at an agonisingly glacial pace, endlessly fussing over details, a state of affairs not much helped by his gargantuan appetite for marijuana: coupled with bouts of writers' block, it meant he released only six albums of original material in a career that lasted 34 years. He was a Labour voter, booster of the NHS and famously generous philanthropist who also engaged in tax avoidance. After being publicly outed, he became a notoriously frank interviewee ("as if nothing can embarrass him anymore" the Guardian's Simon Hattenstone suggested when he met him in 2009). But even as he skinned up in front of journalists and freely discussed his drug use and sex life, he was concealing the extent of the addictions that eventually killed him.The Decline and Final YearsMichael emerges as a messy, unpredictable but ultimately hugely likable figure, which makes the essay about his demise particularly tough reading. Listed starkly on the page, the facts of his final 10 years make it obvious that he was a deeply unwell man whose life had spun wildly out of control: drug busts, medical emergencies, visits to rehab, rumours of breakdowns and suicide bids and seven incidents in which he either crashed his car or was found comatose at the wheel.The Professional Mask of Personal StruggleThat it somehow didn't appear obvious at the time – that his death at 53 felt like a shock rather than a grim inevitability – seems remarkable, but as Sanghera points out, Michael's professionalism did a lot to paper over the cracks. He was always available to the media and always smart, funny and self-effacing: to use a modern turn of phrase, he controlled the narrative. He was punctilious about his appearance – the star certainly never looked like an ailing drug addict – and unfailingly superb onstage.The Hidden Realities Behind the FameBehind the scenes, it was a different story. He struggled to make new music: at one juncture he booked six months of recording sessions but never turned up to the studio once. His once-acute commercial instincts seemed to desert him: even Sanghera can't muster much enthusiasm for the handful of still-unreleased songs he completed in his final years. He cut off close friends and family who tried to intervene. No one who knew him seems to have been particularly surprised by his death: the list of adjectives used to describe him on his official website now includes not just "icon" "legend" "soul singer" and "philanthropist" but "addict" "repeat offender" and "depressive".An Imagined Alternative LegacyAs the book draws to a close, Sanghera offers a heartbreaking alternative history. He imagines Michael conquering his addictions, coming to a complete accommodation with his musical past (to the end of his life, he was dismissive of Wham!, describing their oeuvre as an exercise in "ignoring my own intelligence" and declining to play most of their hits live) and headlining Glastonbury, "getting pleasure from the audience reaction to Club Tropicana".The Enduring Power of George Michael's MusicIt's affecting because you can imagine it so vividly: the endless succession of hits that anyone with even a passing interest in pop music knows, the pandemonium in the crowd when he breaks out Careless Whisper, the encore of Freedom '90. You don't have to be a fan on Sanghera's level to understand what a triumph it would have been. Tonight the Music Seems So Loud: The Meaning of George Michael by Sathnam Sanghera is published by Picador (£22). To support the Guardian, buy a copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
#George Michael #Sathnam Sanghera #Wham!
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Health Jun 02, 2026

DVLA Revokes License Instead of Accepting Surrender After Spinal Injury

After voluntarily surrendering their driving license following a spinal injury, a UK resident found…
The LeadA UK resident voluntarily surrendered their driving license to the DVLA after suffering a spinal cord injury in August 2024, only to have the agency revoke it instead. This administrative decision has created significant barriers to regaining driving privileges, as the person now faces a bureaucratic catch-22 where they need a license to get assessed for adaptive driving equipment.The License Revocation DilemmaAfter the spinal injury, the person took the responsible step of voluntarily surrendering their license to the DVLA. However, rather than accepting the surrender, the DVLA revoked the license. This distinction is critical because a revoked license is much more difficult to reinstate than a surrendered one. The person has now submitted three applications to regain their license, with evidence from their spinal consultant and an off-road driving assessment confirming they can drive with hand controls. Despite submitting this documentation two months ago, they still haven't received an update from the DVLA.The Processing BacklogThe DVLA attributes these delays to "exceptionally high demand" from drivers with medical conditions, which has significantly affected processing times. The agency has acknowledged the problem and says it is introducing a new system to address these delays. The person's experience reflects a broader issue, as evidenced by the "long backlogs of reviews of medically revoked licenses" mentioned in the article.The Assessment Catch-22The person now faces a significant bureaucratic hurdle: they need to take a medical driving assessment to get their license back, but they cannot take one without a license. The DVLA eventually sent an application for a provisional disability assessment license, which should have been provided when the person first applied a year ago. The person also needs to be assessed for a vehicle with suitable hand controls but requires a license before they can be assessed for the most suitable options.Recommended SolutionsThe article suggests that Driving Mobility, which provides on-road assessments for drivers with medical conditions, could help with the assessment process. The DVLA should have referred the person to these services earlier in the process. The agency's failure to provide proper guidance and the necessary provisional assessment application has created unnecessary complications for someone already dealing with the challenges of a spinal cord injury.Future OutlookUntil the DVLA's new system is fully implemented and processing times improve, individuals with medical conditions who need to surrender or have their licenses revoked will continue to face significant challenges. The agency needs to improve its communication processes and ensure that applicants receive all necessary information upfront, rather than requiring multiple applications and creating bureaucratic barriers that prevent people from regaining their independence through driving.
#DVLA #driving license #spinal injury
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Business Jun 02, 2026

Ferrari Shares Plummet After Unveiling First Electric Vehicle, Luce

Ferrari's share price dropped by as much as 8% after unveiling its first electric vehicle, the Luce…
The Launch of Ferrari's First Electric Vehicle Ferrari's share price has dropped after it revealed a long-awaited first electric vehicle, with a minimalist look created by the former Apple design chief Jony Ive that departs from the Italian manufacturer's petrol sportscars. Ferrari Luce: Design and Specifications The Luce, starting at $640,000 (£477,000), has a range of 329 miles (530km) thanks to its battery capacity of 122 kilowatt hours, the company said, with four motors that can accelerate from 0 to 100km/h in 2.5 seconds, with a top speed of more than 310km/h (193mph). Market Reaction and Investor Sentiment The launch was hotly anticipated, given the world's most valuable sportscar maker's totemic status among car and Formula One racing fans. However, the Luce's saloon-like design immediately proved divisive, with some analysts questioning whether it lived up to Ferrari's sportscar heritage. Ferrari's share price dropped by as much as 8% in morning trading on Tuesday in Milan, before recovering to a 6% decline. The carmaker, which produces all its cars in Maranello, northern Italy, was valued at €56bn (£48bn) before the launch. The Impact of Jony Ive's Design The Luce was developed in partnership with LoveFrom, the studio founded by Ive after his long career at Apple, during which he led the design of products including the iPhone, MacBook and Apple Watch. Others said they believed it diverged too far from the blueprint that has made Ferrari one of the most profitable carmakers in the world. The Luce looks like a “mix between a Honda Accord EV and Tesla 3”, wrote Pierre-Olivier Essig, the head of research at AIR Capital, in a note for clients reported by Bloomberg. Ferrari's Future Plans Ferrari, founded in 1939, said the car's design was “simplified and rationalised in service of the driving experience”, and emphasised that was creating an “entirely new Ferrari”. The company last year scaled back its ambitions to shift from petrol to electric. It is aiming to have a 2030 lineup of 40% internal combustion engine models, 40% hybrids and 20% fully-electric.
#Ferrari #Jony Ive #Electric Vehicle
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Lifestyle Jun 02, 2026

The Overwhelming Problem with Art Galleries: Too Much Art

The author, Isabel Brooks, discusses her frustration with the overwhelming number of artworks in ga…
The Overwhelming Problem with Art Galleries Visiting an art gallery always goes the same way for Isabel Brooks. She looks at one artwork, then the next, and the next, but soon forgets what she's seen due to the sheer volume of art on display. The Scale of the Problem The National Gallery displays over 2,400 artworks, the Louvre has up to 4,500 paintings, and the New York Met boasts tens of thousands. This excessive number of artworks leads to 'museum fatigue,' a phenomenon that has been studied since the 1920s. The Impact on the Experience The experience is further marred by the lack of comfortable seating, leading to lower back pain from standing and peering at artworks. Visitors often take bad photos and try to make the experience more entertaining by joking about the art. The Atmosphere of Expectation The atmosphere in galleries suggests that visitors must pay close attention to each piece, under the pretence of being culturally enriched. This expectation can be overwhelming, making visitors feel like they need to behave in a certain way. A Better Approach Brooks suggests that a better approach would be to display fewer artworks, allowing visitors to appreciate each piece more fully. She would prefer to visit a gallery to see one painting rather than thousands.
#Art Galleries #Museum Fatigue #Isabel Brooks
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World Wide Jun 02, 2026

Britain's unequal heatwave: a tale of two cities

The UK is experiencing a severe heatwave, with temperatures reaching 35C in London. While some peop…
The Unequal Impact of the Heatwave The UK is in the grip of a severe heatwave, with temperatures soaring to record highs. However, the impact of the heatwave is being felt unevenly across the country, with those in affluent areas faring much better than those in deprived areas. A Tale of Two Areas In Canary Wharf, one of London's most affluent areas, residents and office workers are enjoying the cool comfort of air-conditioned spaces. Aykhan, a 27-year-old banker, said he had been sleeping well in his new flat with great air-con. "It's a new flat, the air-con is great, my bedroom is cool," he said. In contrast, in Whitechapel, one of the most deprived areas in the UK, residents are struggling to cope with the heat. Asiyha, 26, was sitting under a tree in Weavers Fields with her baby, who is not yet one. "It is way too hot in my flat, that is why we are sitting outside," she said. "I live right nearby. My baby is struggling. We are in a very hot flat and we cannot sleep at night." The Health Risks of Heatwaves Health risks spike when indoor temperatures are above 25C, and there is a link between overheating in homes and the risk of death, particularly for older people. An analysis of housing stock by the thinktank Resolution Foundation found nearly half (48%) of the poorest fifth of English households have homes liable to get too hot – three times as many as among the richest fifth (17%). The Economic Impact of the Heatwave The heatwave has also had an economic impact, with fans, air-con units, and other seasonal items spiking in price. An industry expert said air-conditioning units had risen by about 17% since April. The Dyson Cool Tower fan was priced at £299 on Amazon, up from a low of £249.99 during the period examined. The Future of Heatwaves in the UK As the UK continues to experience more frequent and severe heatwaves, the issue of unequal access to cooling measures is likely to become increasingly pressing. For now, those in deprived areas like Whitechapel are forced to suffer in the heat, while those in affluent areas enjoy the cool comfort of air-conditioned spaces.
#UK #heatwave #inequality
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Sports Jun 02, 2026

Gianni Infantino's Self-Promoting Football Book Sparks Controversy

A scathing review of FIFA President Gianni Infantino's autobiography 'Forward – The Revolution of F…
The Lead: A Questionable Football AutobiographyIn the lead-up to the upcoming World Cup, FIFA President Gianni Infantino released his autobiography 'Forward – The Revolution of Football.' Rather than providing insight into football's future, the book has been met with criticism for being more of a self-promotional mission statement filled with name-dropping and flattering descriptions of world leaders, offering little substantive analysis of the sport itself.The Book's Self-Promotional NatureInfantino's book, published in-house and written by Alessandro Alciato, reads less like a traditional biography and more like an internal directive or alibi. The reviewer notes that despite being described as an 'anecdote-based biography,' the text lacks journalistic detachment, with the author comparing Infantino to both Albert Einstein and Leonardo da Vinci in the introduction. The format is unusual, with text presented in random gobbets resembling biblical verses, and contains excessive references to magic, including repeated mentions of the 'magic ball' that the author claims to play with daily in his office.The FIFA President's ImageThe book reveals much about how Infantino wishes to be perceived rather than providing genuine insight. The cover shows him in a dark suit, white shirt, and clip mic, arms spread in a gesture of 'healing, benevolence, love,' resembling 'a man addressing from the bridge of his personal asteroid of hope.' Throughout the text, Infantino positions himself as a savior figure who single-handedly fought for women's rights in Iran (taking selfies with female spectators) and saved the world from COVID-19 and racism. The numerous photographs in the book, particularly one with Cristiano Ronaldo, show Infantino with 'strangely flat and haunted eyes,' suggesting a man who 'literally cannot believe what is happening to him.'The World Cup ContextPublished just before a 'morally and geographically labyrinthine World Cup,' the book arrives as the closest thing to a guide or press conference from FIFA. However, rather than providing clarity, the book's strange energy and incoherent ramblings leave readers with more questions than answers. The chapter titled 'A Clean Slate,' which promises to address how Infantino rid FIFA of corruption, is disappointingly brief at just four pages, focusing mainly on his decision not to remove Sepp Blatter's old wall safe and his anger about spending on the FIFA museum.The Literary CritiqueFrom a literary perspective, the book falls short of expectations. The reviewer notes that after an interesting anecdote about Infantino's childhood collecting scrap metal on trains, the content becomes increasingly tedious. The book contains incredibly boring travel anecdotes, including a game of football against 40 North Korean children and self-congratulatory stories about how football legends like Diego Maradona changed their tune about FIFA leadership during his tenure. The writing style is described as reading like 'a series of voice notes intoned into the bathroom mirror via a piece of software called dictatorblather.app,' with the text sliding over itself in a display of what the reviewer identifies as 'cognitive dissonance.' Ultimately, the book fails to provide the coherent narrative or genuine insight one would expect from the leader of world football.
#Gianni Infantino #FIFA #Football
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