I want you guys to check it out and see if I said something I shouldn't have, or didn't say something I should have. Also, If you were going to write them a letter, I would say to make the subject Re: The Varsity Story to show some kind of solidarity:

When I saw your story, the way you portrayed the people there made it look like either everyone was doing it or everyone was spectating, and that there were "lines around the block" to do this. The truth is that is not the case. The people you showed doing burnouts are a small minority of the people who gather at the Varsity every month to chat with people who they might not have a chance to talk to at any other time. And I know that the Varsity and the adjacent paid parking lot cannot complain about the extra revenue we bring them every month: If there are about 40 cars in the paid parking lot at $5 each, that's at least $200 a night, and with about 20 or so cars in the official Varsity parking lot, even if everyone only buys a hot dog for $1.35, that is still $27 extra revenue that they would not have because of us. And although it does not seem like much, you must realize that this has been going on for sometime since the late 1990s, with no major problems until about 2005 or so. And to the people living in Midtown who are concerned about safety, let me ask them this: would you rather have those people doing that in the same parking lot at the same time each month so you could avoid it, or would you rather have them doing it in the streets at any random time at any random place where you could be at a higher risk? And while yes, there is a risk of being hit and severely injured by people doing this, there is also a risk of being hit and severely injured while playing football, yet people will still accept that risk and play, which is what we do when we are around those people doing burnouts. Now this does not mean that I in any way condone the practices of those people doing burnouts-in fact, most of the time you will see someone encouraging someone to do that is in a mocking state-there is no other place close to Atlanta to do anything related to performance other than Atlanta Motor Speedway, and there the only real racing you can do is a 1/8 mile drag race with no timing, which is very unsuccessful due to the fact that there is no way to record your time and it is half the length of a normal dragstrip. In conclusion, instead of taking stealth videos and asking people about in a closed room, I invite you to come to the Varsity and make a followup story of talking to random, normal people and ask them what they think of the situation.