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DAVID DROGA IS THE BOLDEST THINKER IN A TROUBLED INDUSTRY. CAN HIS VISION OF A NEW KIND OF AGENCY LEAD THE AD WORLD OUT OF THE DARKNESS?
Droga5 founder David Droga is a master of creating ad content that people actually engage with.

Just over a month after Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States, The New York Times launched its first major ad campaign in recent memory. At its center was a powerful, minimalist TV commercial that debuted during the February 26 Academy Awards broadcast.

In the spot, the disembodied voices of cable-news pundits chatter away as various statements flash in black letters on a plain white screen:

The truth is our nation is more divided than ever.

The truth is alternative facts are lies.

The truth is women’s rights are human rights.

The truth is we have to protect our borders.

It concludes with a tagline: “The truth is more important now than ever.”

The commercial went viral, racking up more than 15 million YouTube views. Stephen Colbert made a parody version, publications across the country covered it as a news story of its own, and the president himself turned his Sauron-like eye on the campaign via his favorite channel of unfiltered communication, Twitter: “For first time the failing @nytimes will take an ad (a bad one) to help save its failing reputation. Try reporting accurately & fairly!”

For ad-industry watchers, it was this repetition and amplification of the original message across so many channels that was most impressive. In fact, it’s one of the signatures of the New York–based agency that created it, Droga5. From its founding in 2006, the company has looked for novel ways to feed its messages into the larger media and pop-culture machine, dramatically increasing reach and impact. The strategy doesn’t always work, but when it does—as with the New York Times campaign—the effect is significant. “Just knowing you’re putting something out there that could take on a greater life, that’s our sweet spot,” says David Droga, the agency’s Australia-born founder and creative chairman. “That’s what we try to do.”

Droga—who has a reputation for being outspoken, edgy, and critical of his industry—is one of the ad business’s key thinkers at a moment of major uncertainty. Last year, digital marketing in the United States exceeded

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