El Presidente is an unflinching, often infuriating look at institutional greed. The PDTV quality is acceptable if you prioritize story over visuals. Recommended for fans of Narcos or Succession —just don’t expect a hero’s journey.
★★★★☆ Rating (PDTV quality): ★★★☆☆ (serviceable but dated) el presidente s01 pdtv
The first three episodes crackle with energy, but mid-season drags under repetitive bribery montages. The nonlinear timeline (jumping between Jadue’s past, his FBI cooperation, and trial aftermath) occasionally confuses. However, the finale lands powerfully, questioning whether justice was truly served or just rebranded. El Presidente is an unflinching, often infuriating look
Watch if you like: Political scheming, based-on-truth scandals, antihero dramas. HD is preferable
The story follows Jadue (a magnetic Andrés Parra), a small-town club president who rises through the ranks of South American football’s corrupt hierarchy, becoming an FBI informant. Parra’s performance is electrifying—simultaneously pathetic, charismatic, and chilling. The show doesn’t excuse Jadue but presents him as a product of a system where bribery is just “business.”
El Presidente takes a bold, dramatic deep dive into one of football’s darkest scandals: the 2015 FIFA corruption case, centered on Chile’s controversial football chief, Sergio Jadue. Season 1 delivers a sharp, fast-paced political thriller that blends dark comedy, crime drama, and sports politics.
The PDTV version is serviceable for early viewing—stable frame rate and clear dialogue, though darker scenes show compression artifacts, and colors are slightly washed out compared to HD releases. For a drama relying on tense boardroom confrontations and subtle facial reactions, HD is preferable, but PDTV won’t ruin the experience.