The Book Blatter hates
Olé Andersen knows the inside stories of FIFA.
When he hung up
his boots after playing for clubs in Switzerland and Denmark
Olé
took his other skills, as a graphics artist, to work for Sepp Blatter
designing everything from tournament trophies to FIFA books.
When Olé quit, sickened by the corruption and
dismayed, even
as an open-minded Dane, by some of the cavorting under the
FIFA
duvets, Herr Blatter discovered Olé's other skill: Creating
lively cartoons revealing that when the Emperor of Football has
no clothes - it is a ghastly sight. But very funny as
Blatter's balloon
of pomposity is punctured repeatedly
When Blatter learned that Olé's book of cartoons
was imminent he
responded with typical FIFA transparency. He sent his lawyers
to a
Zurich court in late 2013 claiming that their client “has a good
reputation and if the cartoons
were published he would never
be able to repair the damage.”
Stop
laughing.
|
Blatter gives Olé a red card |
The Zurich
court banned the cartoons.
It didn't
cost Blatter a penny because he claimed that if he was lampooned, FIFA was
damaged. So FIFA's Finance department paid the legal bill to protect Blatter's
vanity.
The courtroom wrangling continued into January 2014
as Olé, now living in Lucerne, fought for his freedom of speech - and his cartoons.
Blatter was especially upset by Olé's plan to call his
book
The Platter Cartoons. In Danish slang plattenslager is a rascal,
a scamp, a
scallywag.
In November 2014 a higher Zurich court
allowed publication.
A week before the Brazil World Cup The Blatter Cartoons,
now an ebook, was uploaded to Amazon. Two
days later the
FIFA-funded lawyers persuaded Amazon to take the book down,
claiming that it was in the middle of litigation.
|
Blatter sues Olé |
The freedom fight continued. Olé had to pay a 500
Swiss Francs
penalty - or go to jail. He was forced to remove another cartoon
showing
Blatter as a rotten egg. This followed a comment by world
football's leader,
"We have no rotten eggs in FIFA."
Eventually Blatter was privately advised that he was
making a
fool of himself and wasting FIFA money. But the Judge in charge
of the
case told Olé,
"Blatter has never done anything
legally wrong.”
So Olé shows him as an angel in the new book,
The Man
with the Golden Balls.
|
Sepp's low-life friends |
The cartoons cover Blatter at
World Cups going back to Argentina
1978, remind readers of Blatter's close
associates, now
discarded deadbeats,
Jack Warner, Chuck Blazer, Ricardo
Teixeira, Mohamed Bin
Hammam
and Joao Havelange and illustrate
some of Blatter's more memorable
gaffes and his inability to control
his roving eye when young women
are in view.
Dictator note . . . Blatter was most upset by
a
cartoon showing him in the role of Charlie
Chaplin's Great Dictator. See Olé's response!
e-book EURO 20.96
Print book EURO 29.49
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