In 2023-2024, a micro-genre of Latin-American/South Korean co-productions became popular on YouTube. Specifically, a web film called "CEO: Bogotá Exchange" (a hypothetical title based on real trends) went viral in Uruguay and Colombia.
However, existing data points to a more concrete answer. There is a known Colombian web series titled "El CEO" (The CEO) produced by a studio in Bogotá. Often, viewers confuse this with a film shot partially in Montevideo.
The most likely match: "Montevideo Bogotá: The CEO's Video" – A direct-to-YouTube indie film released by a small studio called Cinema Libre. The film follows a tech CEO who must choose between opening a branch in Montevideo or Bogotá. The original title might be in Spanish, but English speakers searching for it phonetically spelled "Bog Té" instead of "Bogotá." montevideo bog te video ceo film youtube free
Yes, the full film is available for free. The producers chose YouTube over Netflix to avoid legal gag orders.
To find it without getting lost in translation: There is a known Colombian web series titled
The user explicitly wants to watch whatever this video is on YouTube without paying. This suggests the video might normally be behind a paywall (e.g., a festival film, a premium documentary, or a leaked paid exclusive).
The most straightforward part. Montevideo is the capital and largest city of Uruguay. In the context of film and music, Montevideo often appears in: The film follows a tech CEO who must
Delete "Bog Té" and replace it with "Bogotá".
Keyword manipulation is common in black-hat SEO and YouTube tagging. Some content creators string together random high-volume terms to attract views. “Montevideo bog te video ceo film” could be a nonsensical tag used on a low-quality video that promises something sensational (like a CEO scandal) but delivers ads or malware. Searches for “free” versions might lead to suspicious websites.
Because "CEO" and "Montevideo" appear together frequently in business news. There is a famous 2018 documentary called "Uruguay: The Silicon Valley of the South" which features the CEOs of fintech companies in Montevideo. While not a "film" in the narrative sense, YouTube tags often mislabel documentaries as "CEO films."