Ok so at the moment I'm thinking of using the speechwriter for a major political figure (perhaps Obama - he didn't write "Yes We Can," despite who it is I would probably leave this ambiguous anyway with allusion to famous speeches) as a critique on American politics, namely the fact that they have no clear distinction between politics and entertainment (think the 2012 Republican Party Convention... that Clint Eastwood scene... wow. Just wow.) I'm thinking this could be a speech from the speechwriter him/herself, or a ficto-criticism featuring elements of the speechwriter. What makes such a fantastic wordsmith and artist take no claim of their own art and give it freely to someone else due to their superior oration skills? As art is expression of one's own truths and skill set, is speaking another's words symbolic of the destruction of art? I have a few things up my sleeve I suppose, but is this too pleb to tell my teacher about? I can't tell if it sounds good or not. Be brutally honest. If it's shit I want to know!
edit: American politics is one of my favourite topics but is it too common? Should my target be more niche?