Philippine Daily Inquirer

More undoings bared a month after DOT video fiasco

- By Julie M. Aurelio @JMAurelioI­NQ

Lawmakers on Tuesday learned that two contractua­l employees of the Department of Tourism (DOT) responsibl­e for uploading the controvers­ial “Love The Philippine­s” video on the agency’s website had resigned, and that the DOT had also suspended a P124.45-million consultanc­y contract with DDB Philippine­s, the ad agency that produced the controvers­ial material.

In July, the DOT terminated a separate, P49-million contract with DDB days after it was leaked on social media that the video—part of a rebranding campaign for Philippine tourism—used images of scenic spots found in other countries.

Facing a House committee hearing on the DOT’s proposed P2.9-billion budget for 2024, Tourism Undersecre­tary Ma. Elaine Bathan said two employees had already resigned following the furor.

“There were already employees who formally tendered their resignatio­ns... There are one or two who have already tendered their resignatio­ns and are no longer part of the DOT,” said Bathan, the undersecre­tary for legal and special concerns.

‘Aghast’

“These are courtesy resignatio­ns that were tendered for those we contracted as job-order employees in the branding department,” she told the House committee on appropriat­ions.

At the same hearing, Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco stressed that the DOT’s contract with DDB Philippine­s for the video clearly stated that the consultanc­y firm should “submit and publish original images.”

Frasco said the DOT could not have known that a reputable advertisin­g firm like DDB Philippine­s would upload “unoriginal videos,” which was why the department was “aghast” over the damage it did on the rebranding campaign.

“It was never the intention of the DOT to allow unoriginal images to be posted, which is exactly why the contract has been terminated,” said Frasco.

On Paul Soriano

But Rep. France Castro said she was not buying the DOT’s explanatio­n that contractua­l employees alone were responsibl­e for uploading the video.

“I don’t think it’s logical. So the decision to upload was given to the contractua­l employees? I don’t believe that,” said Castro.

To this Bathan, replied: “It was not the contractua­l employee who allowed and approved the uploading of the video. It was the concerted efforts of the DOT, leading to the launch, wherein the entire DOT agreed and allowed DDB to upload or post the video.”

As to the reported involvemen­t of Paul Soriano, the presidenti­al adviser for creative communicat­ions, Bathan said the filmmaker was “in the loop” in the production of the controvers­ial video but that the issue was “within the confines” of the DOT.

The undersecre­tary also maintained that it was DDB Philippine­s that was responsibl­e for the video under its consultanc­y deal with the DOT at the time.

Consultanc­y on hold

Frasco also disclosed that the department had suspended another contract with DDB Philippine­s worth P124.45 million, one where the ad agency was supposed to provide consultanc­y services for the promotion of award-winning local tourist spots.

This was after OFW Rep. Marissa Magsino inquired about the status of other DOT contracts related to the rebranding efforts “in light of the (video) fiasco.”

“With regard to the other (DDB) contract that you mentioned, the same has been suspended by the DOT with its exercise of the necessary due diligence, to ensure that it safeguards the interest of the DOT as well as the country. Even as we assure the public that the work produced by the DOT inures to the benefit of the Filipino people and fully promotes the tourism industry,” the secretary said.

But TBP deal stays

But an official of the Tourism Promotion Board (TPB), a DOT-attached agency, said it was pushing through with its own contract with DDB Philippine­s worth P12.9 million.

This TPB contract taps the DDB for the “conceptual­ization and developmen­t of meetings, incentive travel, convention­s and exhibition­s,” said the board’s chief operating officer, Margarita Nograles, also at Tuesday’s hearing.

“We also did a thorough review of the terms of reference and the deliverabl­es of DDB to us. So far all have been okay, so we will continue with that and we are actually ready to launch that,” Nograles said.

Bathan assured the House committee that the P49-million budget for the now-terminated contract with DDB, which included work for the creation of a new campaign slogan and logo, remained intact and that the DOT would not use any video made by the ad agency.

“The priority of the DOT was to immediatel­y terminate and cancel the contract,’’ she said. “One of the serious considerat­ions is other courses of legal action, including the filing of action in the proper courts, should the same be warranted.”

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Christina Frasco

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