Andrew Jennings Popular Books

Andrew Jennings Biography & Facts

Andrew Jennings (3 September 1943 – 8 January 2022) was a British investigative reporter. He was best known for his work investigating and writing about corruption in the IOC and FIFA. Early life Jennings was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, on 3 September 1943. His father worked as a school headmaster; his mother was a housewife. He was the grandson of a former Clapton Orient player. His family relocated to London when he was a child. Jennings attended the University of Hull, and first worked at the Burnley Evening Star. Career Jennings became part of the Sunday Times' Insight team during the late 1960s. He went on to work as an investigative reporter on BBC Radio Four's Checkpoint, probing into cocaine trafficking and murders carried out by the Sicilian Mafia. In 1986 the BBC refused to broadcast his documentary concerning corruption in Scotland Yard. Jennings consequently resigned and transposed the material into his first book, Scotland Yard's Cocaine Connection. The documentary was aired by World in Action. Jennings subsequently worked for Granada, filming several international investigations and small documentaries. His investigation of British participation in the Iran–Contra affair won the gold medal at the New York TV Festival in 1989. He entered Chechnya in 1993 with the first western TV crew ever to enter the country, to investigate Caucasus mafia activity. He worked with World in Action in 1997, with an investigation on British Olympic swimming coach Hamilton Bland. One year later, he presented a documentary on rail privatisation. Panorama Jennings' first appearance on Panorama, a current affairs documentary television programme, came in June 2006 (episode entitled "The Beautiful Bung: Corruption and the World Cup"): Jennings investigated several allegations of bribery within FIFA, including million-dollar bribes to secure marketing rights for the body's sports marketing company ISL along with vote-buying (to secure the position of FIFA president Sepp Blatter), bribery and graft attributed to CONCACAF president Jack Warner. It was followed up in October 2007 with an episode entitled "FIFA and Coe" exploring the relationship between former British Olympian Sebastian Coe and the FIFA Ethics Committee. The most prominent programme was FIFA's Dirty Secrets (first aired on 29 November 2010), which was a 30-minute investigation of corruption allegations against some of the FIFA executive committee members who were to vote on the host for the 2018 FIFA World Cup. Jennings alleged that Ricardo Teixeira, President of Brazil's Football Federation (CBF) and of the 2014 World Cup Organising Committee, Nicolás Léoz of Paraguay, President of the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL), and Issa Hayatou from Cameroon, President of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) all accepted bribes from a television marketing firm. In December 2015, he presented a summary of the investigations into FIFA entitled Fifa, Sepp Blatter and Me for BBC's Panorama. Personal life Jennings was married to Janeen Weir until her death in 1974. They had one daughter together and two children from Janeen’s previous marriage. He was subsequently in a domestic partnership with Clare Sambrook until his death. They had two children together. Jennings suffered a stroke in 2015 during a visit to New York. He died on 8 January 2022 at a hospital in Carlisle. He was 78, and suffered an aortic aneurysm prior to his death. Books Scotland Yard's Cocaine Connection, 1989 ISBN 978-0-224-02521-8 The Lords of the Rings: Power, Money and Drugs in the Modern Olympics, 1992 ISBN 978-0-671-71122-1 The New Lords of the Rings, 1996 ISBN 978-0-671-85571-0 The Great Olympic Swindle, 2000 ISBN 978-0-684-86677-2 FOUL! The Secret World of FIFA: Bribes, Vote-Rigging and Ticket Scandals, 2006 ISBN 978-0-00-720869-2 Omertà: Sepp Blatter's FIFA Organised Crime Family, 2014. The Dirty Game: Uncovering the Scandal at FIFA, 2015 ISBN 978-1-78089-542-0 Awards The Play the Game Award (shared with Jens Weinreich), 2011. In recognition of his "tireless work documenting and bringing mismanagement and corruption in the world's leading sports organisations into public view. Royal Television Society Award for his Channel 4 News investigation on Olympic corruption, 2000. The first "Integrity in Journalism" award given by OATH, 1999. "Best International Documentary", New York TV Festival, 1992 References External links Transparency in Sport (His Personal website) Andrew Jennings at IMDb. Discover the Andrew Jennings popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Andrew Jennings books.

Best Seller Andrew Jennings Books of 2024

  • 2023 synopsis, comments

    2023

    Andrew Jennings

    Set in Melbourne, Australia, climate change is an everyday reality. Water is scarce, and food has to be imported. The green economies have reached the end of their patience. Now th...

  • 2043 synopsis, comments

    2043

    Andrew Jennings

    You know your own mind, right? In the near future this is no longer taken for granted. So integrated with information spaces, we change. How might you mind be changed? To what purp...

  • Murder in the Fabric synopsis, comments

    Murder in the Fabric

    Andrew Jennings

    As the legend of George grew, he knew that it was his use of the wall, the technology, that drove his success rate in murder clearances. Melbourne 2020. Prosperous, but tense. The ...

  • Shark Pool synopsis, comments

    Shark Pool

    Andrew Jennings

    George was always an enthusiastic adopter of the technology. But now it has brought him grief. His fame was always problematic. Now he has gone to extremes to put an end to it. Wil...

  • Glory, Goals and Greed synopsis, comments

    Glory, Goals and Greed

    Joe Lovejoy

    The FA Premier League was born 20 years ago, on 23 September 1991, and has since established itself as the most popular club competition in world football. At the start, however, t...

  • Perilous Republic synopsis, comments

    Perilous Republic

    Andrew Jennings

    In Australia from the early 2020s onward there was growing discord. Wages stagnated and housing prices went up, and up. Conservative parties discovered the power of just throwing m...