Club de Cuervos
A satirical comedy-drama where the stench of privilege meets the sweat of the pitch, unraveling a sibling war for a football throne amidst shadows of a fallen patriarch and black-winged legacy.
Club de Cuervos
Club de Cuervos
07 August 2015 — 25 January 2019 United States of America 4 season 45 episode Ended ⭐ 8.4 (307)
Cast: Luis Gerardo Méndez, Mariana Treviño, Jesús Zavala, Antonio de la Vega, Said Sandoval
Drama Comedy
Institutional Sexism and Gender Roles The Burden of Legacy Class and Privilege (Mirrey Culture) Corruption and Power Dynamics Redemption and Reconciliation

Club de Cuervos - Movie Quotes

Memorable Quotes

Vamos a ser el Real Madrid de América Latina.

— Chava Iglesias

Context:

Spoken in the pilot episode (S1E1) as he takes over the presidency, setting the stage for his many mismanagement failures.

Meaning:

This line encapsulates Chava's initial hubris and his delusional, grandiose vision that ignored the local reality of Nuevo Toledo.

Señor, no mames.

— Hugo Sánchez

Context:

Frequently uttered throughout the series when Chava's requests or ideas become too absurd for even Hugo to tolerate.

Meaning:

A breakthrough moment where the submissive assistant finally loses his patience, symbolizing the breaking point of the "forgotten" characters in the show.

Si no tratas lo que tienes como si fuera oro, los demás lo van a tratar como si fuera caca.

— Walter Bazar (quoted by Chava)

Context:

Chava frequently quotes his idol Walter Bazar throughout Season 1 to justify his expensive and flashy decisions.

Meaning:

Reflects the surface-level "wisdom" of self-help gurus that Chava follows to justify his arrogant behavior and focus on branding over substance.

Me critican más que a México cuando perdió 7-0.

— Chava Iglesias

Context:

Season 3, during a press conference where Chava is defending his erratic behavior as a politician and owner.

Meaning:

A humorous reference to a real-life national sports trauma in Mexico, highlighting Chava's victim complex and his tendency to compare his personal failures to national disasters.