Archives for posts with tag: Tony De Joya

I grew up on Nestle.

My dad was instrumental in launching their Milo powdered chocolate drink and Nido powdered milk in the Philippines in the 1980s, and we always grew up believing that Nestle was the gold standard when it came to quality food products. That was my dad’s fault; his word was the law, and if he said something rocked, I was all too happy to concur.

Tony De Joya says: "Drink more Milo, bitchezzzzz!"

I will openly credit Milo, after all, for my world-class, Olympic quality, award-winning Greek god physique. I practically invented the Milo Dinosaur in my youth, partly because I loved the crunch of the powder while I was drinking, but mainly because I was too lazy to dissolve the granules properly.

The Milo Dinosaur in all its glory.

(“Why is it called a Milo Dinosaur, MDJ Superstar?” you may ask. “Because of the sound your tummy makes after consuming three of them, young Padawan!” I will gleefully answer.)

But I digress.

Nestle has been around a heck of a long time, and just last month, it celebrated its 100th year in the Philippines. They launched a commemorative 90-second TV commercial directed by the incomparable Stephen Ngo telling the tale of Nestle as it threads through the lives of the Filipino consumer.

It’s beautiful, and I will allow you to view it for yourself.

Everything about it is perfect.

The casting, the production design & styling that perfectly captures the milieu of each era, the acting, the storyline – if anyone has ever said that Stephen Ngo is only good for high-gloss, slick productions with acting as a secondary priority, then this spot should prove them wrong. But I need to point out the song written by APO Hiking Society member Danny Javier as the most wonderfully heart-warming element of the piece – it works so well with the visuals, and adds so much emotion and texture in a resonant, deeply personal way.

Nestle has been around 100 years in the Philippines. As a marketing professional working for a rival organization, I wish them ill, and intensely catastrophic business results in the immediate future. But as a consumer, I commend their longevity and steadfast commitment to a singular higher purpose – of bringing good food, good life, to Filipino consumers everywhere.

* The views above reflect my personal opinion, and do not reflect any bias or judgment against how I conduct my professional life.

This is my favorite picture of my dad. It’s from a speech he gave before the Asian Federation of Advertising Associates at one of their conferences in Seoul years and years ago.

People who have had the privilege of seeing him speak in public say he was a powerful presence – full of fire, and thunder, and passion, and fury. He inspired people, he made them believe in him, he made them buy into his ideas. I suppose that’s why he was such a great ad man.

I suppose that’s why I try to talk like him, or at least the way I remember how he used to talk, even though it’s painful and difficult for a boy as shy and introverted as I am. He made people believe. That’s something I’d like to be able to do too.

Was Googling his name again. Here’s something I found about him, written by a man named Romy Virtusio.

Another Tony was de Joya, the Tony de Joya. An original, sui generis. Like Lenny, Tony made his mark in advertising (Lenny and Tony worked together early in their careers, in an ad agency), but fancied himself a PR person as well. Many of AMA’s (the agency he founded and owned) campaigns for Nestle were PR-orientated, as well as its work for JETRO (Japanese External Trade Organization). Tony always had the big picture in mind, what a campaign or project can do for Client, and also for the country. Nobody talked like Tony–he was precise, forceful, charming and rather hard to stop. In PR, Tony was one of those who organized the Asean Confederation of PR organizations. The likes of Tony de Joya do not occur frequently.

I don’t know why I’ve been thinking of Papa a lot lately.

I suppose I need guidance.

Almost 15 years after he passed away, he’s still my inspiration.

I didn’t even realize that the eyeglasses I picked out at random on one of my little shopping trips abroad were almost exactly like his. I wonder if that means Papa is passing on his vision to me?

My papa passed away 15 years ago, less than a month shy of my 15th birthday. He didn’t get to see me graduate with honours from the Ateneo Grade School, but that was okay – I was an overachiever as a child (sigh), I’m sure he was bored of those things by then.

I was trapped in that netherworld between being a child and being a man, so my memories of him at that point were both few and fuzzy.

People told me he was a big name in advertising, a pioneer, a tiger. I suppose that explains why the industry is so near and dear to my heart; it’s genetic. I’ve met so many people who actually got to work with him, were interviewed by him, sat in his talks, were shoved into a pool by him, and one thing they always tell me is – you have big shoes to fill, De Joya.

How so? I was curious, and so I Googled for him over the weekend. Here’s my favorite search result. It’s an excerpt from President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s keynote address at the 2003 Philippine Advertising Congress.

“Anywhere in the world, there will be Filipino country business managers, marketing directors, top advertising personnel. It is a not strange to us that the founding chairman of the Asian Federation of Advertising Agencies was Antonio de Joya, a Filipino. In all fields, in fact, intellectual and physical, from Antonio de Joya to Manny Pacquiao, we are world class.”

- President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Philippine Advertising Congress 2003

How many people get to have their names mentioned in the same breath as the words ”Manny Pacquiao” and ”world class” by the President? I think that’s pretty bad-ass.

R.I.P. Papa. Hope you’re proud of everything I’m doing with my life.

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