Abu Dhabi resident shocked to discover she is the star of an online 'clickbait' advert

Gina Dillon appears alongside her former helper in the advert with the headline ‘Filipina maid retires after becoming millionaire in three months’

Gina Dillon appears alongside her former helper in the online advert which appeared on a local media site. 
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An Abu Dhabi resident spoke of her shock after discovering that her picture was used for a clickbait online advert without her knowledge.

Gina Dillon appears with her former helper in the paid-for advertisement on a media site in the UAE with the headline ‘Filipina maid retires after becoming millionaire in three months’.

She said the woman she is pictured with, Juliana Bernal, did work for her, and has since retired from her position and returned to the Philippines.

She did retire but not as a millionaire, I'm sure. We were generous, but not that generous

But the family employed her for substantially longer than three months and although the family were generous, she is fairly sure she did not retire a millionaire.

To be classed as a millionaire in the Philippines, someone would need to have more than Dh76,380 in the bank.

“She had been with us for five years. After that picture was taken she was with us for another two,” said Ms Dillon, who is the administrator for several Facebook groups and has taken it all in her stride.

“She did retire but not as a millionaire, I’m sure. We were generous, but not that generous.

“I showed my husband this and he joked: ‘How much were you paying her?’”

Ms Dillon, who is from the US, said she shared a picture of the advert – which links to an unrelated news article – with Ms Bernal on Facebook, but has not heard back from her yet.

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates - Gina Billon, UAE resident for the past 8 years, from United States celebrates the results of US elections. Khushnum Bhandari for The National
Gina Dillon was surprised to learn she was the unwitting star of an clickbait online advert alongside her former helper, Juliana Bernal. Khushnum Bhandari / The National

She said the discovery of the picture, which was flagged by a friend, was a surprise.

“As someone on my thread said, you see these people on this paid content and you always wonder, who are they?

“It’s me, that’s who,” Ms Dillon said.

She said she remembers the exact day the picture was taken in 2016, on the same day she had a photoshoot for The National for an article about how residents can cash in when selling their belongings.

“I remember, Juliana was standing there and she said something like 'oh mam you look so nice', or something like that,” Ms Dillon said.

“'It’s so great they’re doing this article.' And I said: 'I couldn’t do it without you, Juliana.' And then I snapped the picture.”

She then shared it online with a tribute to her former helper.

“I shared it along with the story about how much I relied on Juliana. She had been with me for five years.

"I didn’t speak about her salary. It was just a little tribute to her. She was the backbone of our family.

"And that’s all I did. I just wrote this tribute to her, and somebody grabbed it.”

Ms Dillon is uncertain of where she posted the image online but is taking a light-hearted approach to the incident.

“I don’t let things bother me that much. I am out there. And so, it’s not fair but I guess I will roll with it,” she said. “And I guess if you’re going to make up stuff about me, it’s a nice one isn’t it?”