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Source :Seeking Alpha

I had the pleasure of running into John Paulson this past week where I got to introduce myself in passing. John Paulson is one of the primary backers of the Moelis plan and is a GSE investor.

This past week refers to a time, not a place.

When is a time-relative pronoun that joins a modifying clause.
Where is a location-relative pronoun that joins a modifying clause. For example:
The day when the concert takes place is Sunday.
The site where the concert will take place is Golden Gate Park.
Grammar-Quizzes.com

Maybe the sentence should be rewritten as:

I had the pleasure of running into John Paulson this past week when I got to introduce myself in passing.

It is a typo in the article?

2 Answers 2

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I wouldn't call it entirely wrong, but I like when better than where here. The reason that it isn't entirely wrong is that presumably there was a place where the speaker ran into Paulson.

Suppose we add this:

I had the pleasure of running into John Paulson this past week at the convention, where/when I got to introduce myself in passing.

As you can see, this sentence provides both a time and a place, and where or when work equally well.

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In this sentence, where is a conjunction. According to the Cambridge Dictionary, as a conjunction, it can either mean in a place that, or in a situation that.

In your sentence, no place is referred to, but meeting John Paulson is a situation, and in that situation the speaker was able to introduce himself.

This meaning is used a lot in mathematics, for example:

Transformations on rational functions where x is in the numerator and denominator

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