Wednesday, October 24, will forever be known as the day that a slew of pipe bombs were sent to CNN and a long list of prominent Democrats across the country. Today, October 25, will likely be known as the day President Donald Trump seemed to publicly blame the bombs being sent on members of the media themselves.

Don’t get me wrong — it’s an enormous mess. Bombs being sent to the homes and offices of former presidents, vice presidents, and members of Congress is a big deal. It deserves to dominate news coverage. And when the sitting president of the United States — while those bombs are still being discovered — tweets about how the simmering anger of this country is because of the media, we have a real problem on our hands.

The bombs, though, were actually Wednesday’s second-most important story in this country. The other most important story caught the media’s attention for just a few minutes, then faded right back out of the news cycle. In its short life as a national story, no one ever quite got it right.

In the calm of a sunny afternoon, at a Kroger grocery store in the east side of Louisville, Kentucky, a 51-year-old white man named Gregory Bush walked right into the store with a loaded gun, targeted two black customers, and killed them.