YouTube and FIFA just made World Cup 2026 content monetizable. GOLAZO is the complete, no-fluff system for pointing AI at a soccer clip and getting back ready-to-post vertical Shorts — no filming, no editing, no on-camera presence.
One-time $49 · Lifetime access · All future updates
For years, posting professional soccer clips was a fast track to a copyright strike, so the supply of soccer Shorts stayed artificially low.
Then YouTube and FIFA announced a partnership making YouTube a preferred platform for FIFA World Cup 2026 — the biggest sporting event in history, 104 matches across the USA, Canada, and Mexico.
The demand was always there. The bottleneck was supply. A rights thaw plus AI editing collapses both problems at once.
This course is the pickaxe.
Wire Claude to a video-editing AI (Higgsfield) with one MCP connector. One-time, ~30 seconds.
Find a source clip you're allowed to use and copy the link.
Drop in one sentence and let the AI take over from there.
The AI finds peak moments, cuts vertical 9:16 Shorts, picks the font, burns in captions, and writes the titles.
Batch, schedule, and post ~30 a day on autopilot.
Multiply channels and turn views into real monetization.
"Using Higgsfield, clip this video into viral YouTube Shorts formats: [link]."

Shorts pay modestly per view (~$50–$200 per million from the ad pool) versus $1,000–$15,000+ for long-form. The win is a volume and funnel game.
Most Shorts get few views. Earnings are never guaranteed. The math shows the strategy's shape, not a forecast of your income.
YouTube × FIFA, why clips pay, the volume math.
Claude + Higgsfield MCP connector setup, click by click.
Sourcing, copyright safety, picking the peaks.
The core workflow plus control variations.
The packaging craft that makes Shorts go viral.
Batch production, scheduling, reading analytics.
YPP, multi-channel, building past the Cup.

One-time payment · Lifetime access · All future updates included
This course is for educational purposes only. It is not financial, business, or legal advice.
Rights to World Cup footage belong to FIFA, broadcasters, and rights-holders. The YouTube × FIFA partnership widens the lane for World Cup content but does not grant blanket permission to re-upload any footage. You are responsible for complying with copyright law and the terms of every platform and tool you use — work from sources you're allowed to use and make your edits genuinely transformative.
Earnings are not guaranteed. Most Shorts get few views, and many channels never reach monetization eligibility. Tool and platform costs apply. Verify current YouTube, FIFA-program, and tool policies before relying on them, and seek qualified professional advice for your situation.
Point. Prompt. Post. The flood is coming — get your machine running first.