Philip Pullman once said: 'Read like a butterfly, write like a bee.' I couldn't agree more. I've taken ideas from Solzhenitsyn, King Lear, and even a Lacoste advert before.
—Jacob Rigg, from The Guardian
When pressed on whose speeches Obama's are compared to, Rigg admits that "People used to mock me for this, but if you’re interested in writing speeches, read Aristotle’s Rhetoric. Most of the stuff that's out there, the rudimentary tricks, Aristotle cornered the market in, thousands of years ago", On the subject of writing for politics, Rigg is currently giving talks in parts of the United Kingdom. He is also currently working for the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners and continues to be a supporter of the Liberal Democrats.
Controversies
On 16 March 2009 and again on 1 April 2009, Newsweek's The Gaggle blog alleged Rigg was not actually involved in the Obama campaign, dubbing him "A Faux Favreau" and citing White House spokesman Tommy Vietor saying:
Every word of this story is fabricated. None of us had even heard this individual's name until we read these claims in the paper. Apparently he's a talented fiction writer.
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