Why not a 10? The episode rushes the legal aftermath. One minute Jadue is confessing, the next we see a title card explaining his reduced sentence. It could have used 10 more minutes of psychological fallout. But as an ending to a season about corruption, it’s brutally effective.
Since you have this as an , pay attention to the sound mixing. Episode 6 uses a lot of low-frequency drone during Jadue’s solitary scenes — it’s almost sub-bass, which M4A handles better than MP3. The dynamic range is wide: whispers, then sudden slamming of a car door (the arrest scene), then total silence. Don’t listen on phone speakers. Use headphones. The Foley work (footsteps on marble floors, the crinkle of legal documents) is pristine. el presidente s01e06 m4a
The hotel room meeting with the undercover FBI informant. Listen carefully to the dialogue. It’s not loud. It’s whispered, urgent, layered over the sound of ice cubes clinking in a glass. Jadue realizes he’s been recorded for months. The showrunners do something brilliant here — they replay audio from Episode 3 (the bribe in the Santiago parking lot) but now it’s filtered through a surveillance mic. It’s the same words, but they sound filthy, damning. Why not a 10
El Presidente Season 1, Episode 6 doesn’t give you justice. It gives you truth. And truth, in this M4A recording, sounds like a wiretap, a sigh, and a door closing forever. It could have used 10 more minutes of psychological fallout
Subscribe for more episodic reviews. Next up: Season 2 premiere — does the story of Brazilian club politics hold up without Jadue? Spoiler: it does, but differently.