TIME magazine's cover lists the 253 US cities that experienced a mass shooting in 2019

DAYTON, Ohio -- Dayton. El Paso. Gilroy. Virginia Beach. Chesapeake. Some you have heard of. Many you have not. They're just a handful of the 253 U.S. cities listed on TIME magazine's latest cover, which hits newsstands on Friday, Aug. 9. Each city experienced a mass shooting in 2019.

The cover comes after a weekend of deadly mass shootings in Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas, and as calls to do something about gun violence and domestic terrorism ramp up again.

"TIME's new cover: 'We are being eaten from within.' Why America is losing the battle against white nationalist terrorism," TIME officials wrote in a tweet announcing the cover.

San Francisco Bay Area artist John Mavroudis drew the cover, calling it a "frightening portrait of a country drowning in gun violence."

Against the backdrop of the list of cities, the word "ENOUGH" is emblazoned across the cover in capital letters. The theme is similar to the 2018 cover featuring survivors from the school shooting in Parkland, Florida.

Under it, the text reads: "A year of gun violence in America. So far."

Mavroudis told CNN the list of shootings was based on data from the Gun Violence Archive, which defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people were shot or killed, not including the shooter.

He said he first went about designing the cover in a methodical way, but eventually, the volume of incidents started to sink in.

"At a certain point, I started stepping back and thinking about the actual cities that I'm writing," Mavroudis said. "I came across my hometown San Jose, California, and that stopped me in my tracks."

Mavroudis said that he hopes that people look beyond just the list of cities and realize that each name on the cover represents a shooting that affects entire communities.

"If you start looking a little closer at the details, you realize that every single one of these names represents actual incidents," Mavroudis said. "And actual incidents represent real people, and every single gun death doesn't affect just that person. It affects their family and friends."

Mavroudis also designed the Oct. 15, 2018 TIME cover featuring Christine Blasey Ford.