We are introduced to a new protagonist—or rather, an anti-hero in waiting. The focus shifts from the slick, global machinations of the first season to a more localized, gritty struggle. The episode follows (a compelling, weary performance by newcomer Carlos Araya ), a former club accountant forced into the role of interim federation president after everyone above him is indicted. The “Dthrip” Strategy The episode’s central tension hinges on a single, impossible deadline. Rojas discovers that the federation’s new digital streaming deal (the “Dthrip” of the title) has been funneling money through a shell company named Tridimensional Holdings . In 48 hours, the servers will wipe, and all evidence of where $40 million went will vanish unless he can unlock a three-step authentication key.
The show’s writing here is both its strongest and weakest asset. The cat-and-mouse chase through encrypted chat logs and abandoned server farms is genuinely tense, reminiscent of Mr. Robot or ZeroZeroZero . However, the dialogue occasionally trips over its own cleverness. Characters speak in riddles of football metaphors (“You don’t pass the ball to the man who’s offside, even if he’s the president”), which feels forced rather than profound. Director Fernanda Urrea brings a claustrophobic, paranoid aesthetic to “Dthrip.” The bright, sun-drenched boardrooms of Season 1 are gone, replaced by fluorescent-lit basements, rain-streaked windows, and the green glow of monitor screens. The sound design is exceptional—every keyboard click sounds like a gun being cocked.
After the explosive, scandal-laden first season that chronicled the rise and fall of FIFA’s corrupt hierarchy through the eyes of an outsider, El Presidente returns for its second season with an episode that deliberately breaks from its predecessor. Titled “Dthrip” (a cryptic word that fans are already dissecting as either a character’s nickname or a coded chess move), the premiere immediately poses a question: Can a show about corruption survive its own purge?
Streaming now on Prime Video. Episode 2: “Double Fault” airs next Friday.