She confronts her vice president, (a composite of real corrupt officials). He doesn't deny it. Instead, he offers a deal: "Help me control the narrative, or I release the other HDTV file — the one with your signature approving the fake sponsorship deals."

He reveals that the HDTV leak didn't come from a hacker. It came from — a purge. The three men in the new footage are being sacrificed so that a bigger figure (a sitting FIFA Executive Committee member from Brazil) can claim he's "cleaning house" and run for global presidency.

"This episode is dedicated to the journalists who still watch the unedited feeds."

Sergio Jadue (now in witness protection in an unnamed US city) is painting a birdhouse in his backyard. He’s gained weight, grown a beard. A FedEx package arrives. Inside: a USB stick and a note: "They're blaming you for this one. Play it."

He plugs it into his TV. It’s the same HDTV file Kun found. But this footage is — it shows Jadue himself from 2015, in a room he swore he burned all records of. A conversation with a Mexican cartel representative about fixing the Gold Cup. Jadue didn't just take bribes for football; he laundered drug money.

The episode opens not in Chile, but in a high-end condo in Miami, 2019 . A hacker (callsign Kun ) is scrubbing through old hard drives from the CONMEBOL offices. He finds a single file labeled: FINAL_MASTER_HDTV.mkv . He plays it. On screen, three men we don't recognize are laughing, counting cash, and discussing a rigged 2026 World Cup bid. Kun smiles. "El Presidente is back."

In Santiago , a new, idealistic president of the ANFP, Valentina Diaz (fictional character, a former prosecutor), sees the leak. She realizes the old guard isn't gone — they've just rebranded. The three men in the original HDTV file are her own board members.