seven day a week paper. they are going forward without the five slain staffers you see on screen. it was notable in this motion s edition, the annapolis mayor is quoted as saying he s worried the national media is already moving on, we re onto the next story and next attack, onto the next spasm of violence somewhere else in the country. he s urging flags to be at half staff as a memorial. you see this morning s cover, remarkable because it s a story retracing what happened. i think more broadly, the shooting attack clearly brought new attention to what journalists do every day in local communities like annapolis and also in big city papers like the washington post. the day before the shooting in annapolis, i spoke with marty baren, the head of the washington post and talked about the need whether it s covering the president or covering a small town, the need for courage. here s what he said. we re under a lot of pressure. it s something we ll have to deal with. i think that we ne
in on these negotiations. it s because as you point out, we ve spent over $6.5 billion in the last 20 years building these stadiums up. you mention getting the fans involved. the green bay packers just won the super bowl as the only fan-owned team in the nfl. should all the teams be owned by the fans? how great would that be, right? we wouldn t have to worry about owners suing city papers like we have here in d.c. or trying to get season ticketholders who are 82 years old to pay for their seats. that s not going to happen because the nfl has passed a rule they won t allow it. if we can get enough fans to support us, we can really make a difference on this debate. let s look at the packers for a second. as a fan-own teams, they can t be moved, hard to sell.