What starts as a small-time operation quickly escalates. Martín, the intelligent and calculated narrator, rises through the ranks, while Pepe becomes the impulsive, violent enforcer. Season 1 meticulously traces their transformation from innocent young men into wealthy, paranoid capos. The title— Sapos (snitches)—casts a long shadow. In the narco world, loyalty is the only currency, yet betrayal is the only guarantee. As the Colombian government (aided by the DEA) intensifies its hunt, the pressure mounts, and the "code of silence" begins to crack. The season masterfully builds toward the inevitable collapse, where each character must decide: die loyal, or become a sapo to survive.

Released in 2008, El Cartel de los Sapos (literally "The Cartel of the Snitches" or "The Snitch Cartel") is a Colombian crime drama that pulls no punches. Based on the explosive 2003 memoir by former drug lord Andrés López López (under the pseudonym "Andrés López"), the series offers a chilling, first-person account of the inner workings of the Cali Cartel—the often overshadowed but equally powerful rival to Pablo Escobar’s Medellín Cartel. Season 1, consisting of 59 episodes, is more than just a narco-thriller; it’s a tragic study of ambition, loyalty, paranoia, and the corrupting nature of easy power.

Here’s a write-up on El Cartel de los Sapos (Season 1), the acclaimed Colombian TV series based on true events. Introduction

The story follows two childhood friends from Cali, (played by Manolo Cardona) and Pepe Cadena (played by Diego Cadavid), who grow up in the 1980s during the explosion of Colombia’s cocaine trade. Ambitious and hungry for a life beyond their humble means, they begin working for the powerful Cali Cartel, led by the shrewd and business-like Rodríguez Orejuela brothers.

El Cartel de los Sapos Season 1 is not an easy watch. It is long (59 episodes), brutal, and often bleak. But it is also essential viewing for anyone who wants to understand the human cost of the cocaine trade from the inside out. It is the story of a generation that got lost in the snow, told not by a journalist or a cop, but by one of the ones who got out alive. — A gripping, sobering masterpiece of narco-realism.

Shot on location in Colombia, the series has a gritty, documentary-like feel. It avoids Hollywood gloss. The clothes, the cars, the neighborhoods feel authentic to the late 80s and early 90s. The use of "vallenato" music and Colombian slang grounds the story in a specific cultural reality. For Colombian audiences, many of the events—the bombing of the Building of the DAS (security agency), the prison breaks, the extradition flights—are recent, painful memories, adding a layer of raw authenticity.

El Cartel de los Sapos was a watershed moment for Latin American television. Before Narcos (Netflix), this series proved that a locally produced narco-drama could have world-class writing, acting, and production value. It became an international hit, broadcast in over 20 countries. It also sparked controversy for its violence and the concern that it "glorified" criminals—though a careful viewing reveals it as a cautionary tale, not a glorification.