El Presidente S01e06 Bdscr ((free)) Official
Cut to black. Text on screen: “Sergio Jadue cooperated with the FBI. He remains in witness protection. Chilean football has yet to recover.” | Element | Breakdown | | :--- | :--- | | Pacing | Frenetic. No filler. Every scene pushes Jadue closer to the abyss. | | Tone | Shifts from crime-drama to psychological thriller to tragedy. | | MVP Performance | Daniel Muñoz as Jadue. His silent breakdown in the signing scene is award-worthy. | | Historical Accuracy | The Datisa deal and FBI proffer are real. Jadue did flip. | | Weakness | The “uncle” subplot feels rushed; needed one more episode to breathe. |
“You wanted to be famous, Sergio. Congratulations. You’re infamous.” – María Inés, walking away. Scene 7: The Signing (43:00 – 52:00) The Beat: The climax. Back in the sterile FBI hotel room. A single pen, a 147-page cooperation agreement. el presidente s01e06 bdscr
She plays an audio clip. It’s a 2012 meeting where Jadue accepts a $500,000 bribe to award a media rights contract to Datisa (a shell company). Jadue’s own voice is clear: “Put it in the Panamanian account. My cousin will sign.” Cut to black
The agent nods. The door closes. Jadue is no longer a defendant. He is . Final Scene: The Empty Stadium (52:00 – 56:00) The Beat: The epilogue. Jadue, under guard, watches a youth soccer match from a nondescript van. His son is playing. Chilean football has yet to recover
Jadue presses his palm against the cold window. No tear falls. He just whispers: “Gol.”
Staff avoid eye contact. His desk is cleared. The beat here is about . His right-hand man, Harold Mayne-Nicholls, has distanced himself. A single phone call from CONMEBOL (South American soccer body) informs Jadue that Chile’s Copa América hosting rights are now under review.
The episode picks up seconds after Episode 5’s cliffhanger. Federal police, accompanied by FBI agents, storm Sergio Jadue’s residence. The scene is shot in a claustrophobic, handheld style. Jadue, still in silk pajamas, tries to play the victim: “¿Qué está pasando? ¡Soy el presidente de la ANFP!”