A GOP post-convention bounce? Maybe for the job-seeking journalist who cried plagiarism
CLEVELAND — One possible winner from this week’s Republican gathering got his convention bounce in a coffee shop, 3,700 kilometres away from the site where Donald Trump became a presidential nominee.
This convention-conqueror was a laid-off journalist hanging out in a Los Angeles Starbucks, chatting with friends on Facebook while streaming video of the exercise in democracy unfolding.
That’s where Jarrett Hill broke the most-talked-about story of his career and managed to scoop 15,000 journalists in Cleveland with news that produced many thousands more headlines.
He is the first to have realized that a Republican convention speech plagiarized the wife of the current Democratic president. The immediate result: After seeking work for 15 months, he has started receiving a number of invitations to chat about possible job offers.


