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Introduction In the third episode of Amazon’s El Presidente , titled “The Committee,” the series shifts from chronicling Sergio Jadue’s meteoric rise within Chilean football to exposing the bureaucratic machinery that enabled global corruption. Unlike the preceding episodes, which focused on personal ambition and local strong-arming, Episode 3 serves as a forensic dissection of how international sports governing bodies transform into protection rackets. By analyzing the episode’s depiction of the FIFA Executive Committee, this essay argues that El Presidente uses dark comedy and procedural realism to reveal that corruption is not a flaw of individual bad actors but the intended operating system of an unaccountable institution.

Episode 3 centers on Jadue (Karl-Heinz Schulze) being groomed by FIFA insiders to become a puppet for South American football’s power brokers. The episode’s key insight is that Jadue’s provincial background—once a source of insecurity—is weaponized as an asset. His ignorance of Swiss banking laws, his desperation for legitimacy, and his willingness to sign anything presented to him make him the perfect “useful idiot.” This dynamic is crystallized in a single scene where a veteran FIFA committee member tells Jadue, “We don’t need clever men. Clever men ask questions. We need executives.” el presidente s02e03 libvpx

A subplot in Episode 3 follows a Chilean sports journalist who tries to expose a suspicious land deal involving Jadue and a stadium construction project. The journalist’s investigation is systematically neutralized—not through violence, but through legal threats, access denial, and the complicity of mainstream outlets who fear losing World Cup broadcast rights. This subtext offers a sharp critique of the media’s role in the 2015 scandal. The episode asks: Why did it take a US federal indictment (not investigative journalism) to bring FIFA down? The answer, implied by the narrative, is that the entire ecosystem—broadcasters, sponsors, national federations—profited from the status quo. Introduction In the third episode of Amazon’s El

By the end of Episode 3, Jadue has fully internalized the committee’s logic. In a telling final shot, he practices his signature in a hotel mirror—not out of vanity, but because he has been told he will need to sign dozens of untraceable contracts. The physical act of signing becomes a ritual of self-corruption. His earlier desire to improve Chilean football infrastructure is never mentioned again. The episode thus tracks a tragedy: the idealist who loses his original purpose not by being coerced, but by being seduced into a system where efficiency is measured in concealment. Episode 3 centers on Jadue (Karl-Heinz Schulze) being

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