Power Plays
Power Plays
Power Plays

Power Plays

Behind your favorite sport there is always something else at play.

Power Plays
Power Plays

Power Plays

Behind your favorite sport there is always something else at play.

The Human Rights Foundation’s Power Plays podcast series will unpack how some of the world’s most notorious autocrats use sports to launder their reputations, expand their influence, and tighten their grip on power.

Blending narrative storytelling with in-depth interviews, this series exposes the hidden power plays behind global sports.

Each five-episode season dives deep into a specific theme, revealing how dictators manipulate sports as a tool of control, propaganda, and corruption. Hosted by Karim Zidan, HRF’s Sports & Dictators Program Lead, and produced by Elie Bleier, Robert Scaramuccia and HRF’s multimedia team, Power Plays is the definitive deep dive into the intersection of sports and authoritarian power.

S1

The Authoritarian History of the World Cup

Episodes

The Fascist World Cup

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The first episode explores how Benito Mussolini turned the 1934 World Cup into a stage for fascist propaganda. We’ll examine how sport, nationalism, and spectacle intertwined in interwar Italy — and how the world’s most beloved tournament was born under the shadow of authoritarian control.

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Pelé, the Dirty Wars, and the Monster in the Streets

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Power Plays Season 1 - Episode 2
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Amid the terror of Argentina’s military dictatorship, the 1978 World Cup became a tool of distraction and legitimacy. This episode unpacks how the junta used football to project unity and stability while thousands “disappeared” in the Dirty War — and how the game’s global audience became unwitting spectators of repression.

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Pussy Riot and Putin’s World Cup

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Power Plays - Episode 3

As the modern strongman era took hold, Vladimir Putin seized the 2018 World Cup as a chance to reintroduce Russia on the global stage. Far more than a sporting spectacle, the tournament became a carefully orchestrated exercise in soft power: a showcase designed to project openness, competence, and national pride while muting criticism and dissent.

In this episode, we’ll examine how the World Cup functioned as a masterclass in image management—blending hospitality, spectacle, and tightly managed media narratives—and what it reveals about the politics of perception in an age defined by disinformation and authoritarian branding.

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The Deadly Cost of Qatar’s World Cup

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In a desert transformed by migrant labor and sustained by vast reserves of petrodollars, Qatar’s 2022 World Cup laid bare both the promises and the limits of reform. The tournament’s dazzling stadiums and meticulously curated spectacle projected an image of modernity and progress, even as they obscured deep-rooted labor abuses and restrictions on basic rights.

This episode investigates how wealth reshaped scrutiny, softened accountability, and reframed criticism—and what the event ultimately revealed about the global institutions, corporations, and audiences willing to look away, exposing the quiet complicity that allows authoritarian systems to endure.

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The Power of Football

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Welcome to the final episode of Power Plays Season 1. If you haven’t seen the previous four, now’s the time. Today we’re going to talk about the future. About what to do with everything we’ve learned in this series: about FIFA; about the World Cup, and its support for authoritarian regimes. About whether you (yes, you) should do something about it.

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Next Episode Coming Soon

Episodes releasing every Thursday until June 11th, 2026

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About the Host

Karim Zidan

Karim Zidan

Sports & Dictators Program Lead

Karim Zidan is an award-winning author and investigative journalist who focuses on the intersection of sports and politics. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Guardian, Foreign Policy, as well as documentaries for HBO and CNN. He is the founder of Sports Politika, a media platform dedicated to his niche and runs the Human Rights Foundation’s Sports & Dictators program. His debut book is set to be published by Simon & Schuster in 2027.

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