The answer, based on this first episode, is yes, but not without some growing pains. Season 1 ended with the dramatic arrest of the football federation’s top brass in Zurich, leaving a power vacuum. Season 2, Episode 1 wastes no time establishing that the old guard is gone, but the system remains intact. The title, “Dthrip,” is a phonetic twist—whispered in the opening scene by a low-level data analyst who explains it’s how you pronounce “3D” when you’re looking at a hologram of debt. It’s a clumsy metaphor, but an apt one: the show is now operating in three dimensions, layering political maneuvering over financial chicanery over personal vendettas.
Additionally, the episode ends on a cliffhanger that feels unearned. After all the digital sleuthing, Rojas discovers that the “Dthrip” key is not a code but a person —a retired referee living in Patagonia who holds the final password. The reveal lands with a thud rather than a bang because the episode didn’t earn our investment in the mystery. Grade: B- el presidente s02e01 dthrip
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 answer, based on this first episode, is