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.
This is the They don’t threaten Jadue with prison—they threaten him with extinction . They show him photos of José Maria Marin (Brazil) and Juan Angel Napout (Paraguay) being extradited in handcuffs. el presidente s01e06 bdscr
He signs “Sergio Jadue” with a flourish—the same dramatic signature he used on multi-million dollar TV deals. Then he looks at the FBI agent and says: “I want immunity for my father’s debt, too.” The agent nods
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. | His son is playing
Jadue slams his fist on a table and shouts, “¡Yo construí esto!” (I built this!). The camera lingers on a framed photo of him with Pelé and Blatter—a shrine to a crumbling empire. Scene 3: The FBI’s Soft Pitch (12:00 – 19:00) The Beat: The show’s first extended interrogation room scene. Agent Jeff (the stoic American) and Chilean prosecutor Claudia Arellano lay out the evidence.