plus my sit-down with marty baron. and later, a wakeup call. liberal media outlets are sounding the alarms about trump, supreme court, immigration. is the rest of the press listening? we'll get to all of that this hour. but first, heartbreak in annapolis and newsrooms across the country. thursday was the deadliest day for journalists in america since 9/11. and today in the aftermath of the attack in annapolis, the capital gazette is honoring their five fallen colleagues with this front page. even after the newsroom was turned into a bullet-riddled war zone, the capital gazette continued to publish. there's been three editions since thursday. there's also been an incredible outpouring of support from the community. a reminder of the power of local journalism and the importance that it has in the lives of so many americans. we want to talk in depth about what happened at the capital gazette office on thursday and how the paper's recovering now. let's start by talking to two staffers in one after their first interviews. rachel pachella and phil da