Le Mondial tourne au fiasco : sièges vides, billets jusqu’à 3 000 $

If you want to learn how to spot these mechanisms yourself, I've compiled everything in my guide here: https://thomas-services.mychariow.sho... I spent the week researching this World Cup situation, and the more I looked at the numbers, the more interesting it became. A stadium advertised as full while rows of seats were left empty. Tickets costing $3,000 for a match in Toronto. And on the other end of the line, a simple question: who's ultimately paying? It's Thomas. In this video, I go over everything from the beginning, from the empty seat in Guadalajara to the one to two billion dollar bill left for Canadian taxpayers. We talk about dynamic pricing—this system that sets the price of a ticket like an airline ticket. We discuss Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal, which chose to say no. And for those of you following me from Europe, you'll see, the prices on this side of the Atlantic are also worth a look. Let me say it again, calmly: I'm not a financial advisor, and nothing here is money advice. I'm showing you the mechanisms, giving you my sources, and letting you verify them for yourself. The figures come from Radio-Canada's cost survey, price checks from FranceInfo, the Angus Reid poll in Toronto, and FIFA's response to Reuters. It's all public, go check it out. The "Great Shift" guide I mention in the video is for understanding this kind of movement in depth, at your own pace. It's available at a special introductory price for a few more days; the link is right above. Tell me in the comments: what's that thing in your life that's presented as a celebration but looks more like a bill? I read everything and reply as much as I can. And if this perspective resonates with you, subscribe—new content is released daily about this World Cup. #WorldCup2026 #WorldCup2026 #FIFA #Economy