Assuming you are referring to , which is often the point where viewers get hooked, here is the review.
Episode 3 is where the hooks sink in. It moves past the exposition and into the "how did they get away with this?" phase. It is entertaining, infuriating, and sharply written. el presidente s02e03 brrip
The highlight here is the dynamic between Jadue and the larger-than-life personalities surrounding him. The show excels at showing the seductive nature of power. Jadue isn’t portrayed as a mastermind villain, but rather as a man who stumbles into a world of private jets and bribes and simply lacks the willpower to say no. Episode 3 captures that transition perfectly—the moment "going along with it" turns into active participation. Assuming you are referring to , which is
Narrator Sergio Jadue (Andrés Parra) provides crucial historical context by introducing the Dassler family , the founders of Adidas. This backstory illustrates the emerging, symbiotic relationship between corporate branding and professional soccer that would eventually define Havelange’s era. It is entertaining, infuriating, and sharply written
Andrés Parra carries the episode. He has a difficult job: making a corrupt official sympathetic—or at least watchable. He plays Jadue with a mixture of naivety, cowardice, and a desperate need for validation. In this episode, specifically, his panic attacks and his attempts to juggle his family life with his new "business" responsibilities provide the dark comedy core.