The morning deadline for Guns.com is 8 a.m. Eastern, the afternoon deadline is 2 p.m. Eastern. None of his writers had missed their deadlines. His reporter in Chicago sent a story, aggregated from the Tribune, about a spike in rifle usage among gangs. It was one of the only stories that day with a Chicago hook. The rest — and other stories filed over the next 24 hours — came from every corner of the country. None read overtly pro-gun, or anti-gun, but simply, as stories about guns, firearms gear, gun proponents and gun opponents. A story about U.S.-Canada border patrol agents; a story about gun control activists in Delaware asking the mayor of Wilmington to find a second to talk; a story about an Australian man arrested for making guns with 3-D printers; a story about the fate of sport shooting at the 2020 Olympics; a story about one of Elvis' revolvers, up for sale; a roundup of opinions on Donald Trump's call for increased military spending; product reviews of new pistols and rifles (often with demonstration videos); a story about a Georgia teen accidentally shot while sneaking into his girlfriend's home; a story about gun control proposals in Minnesota; a story about concealed-carry laws in Kentucky; a story about Nevada congressmen "worried about turning libraries into gun-free zones."