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41 Things to Do in the DC Area This Week and Weekend

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41 Things to Do in the DC Area This Week and Weekend


Photograph courtesy of Arlington Strategy.

Happy Monday, DC!

It’s Summer Restaurant Week. Satisfy your taste buds with local bites and good deals at hundreds of area restaurants. Or, dance along to Michael Jackson’s greatest hits at the local opening of MJ the Musical.

Best Things to Do This Week and Weekend

August 12–August 18

    1. Summer Restaurant Week. Catch brunch, lunch, and dinner deals during DC Summer Restaurant Week at more than 300 participating eateries. You can visit new dining rooms such as Mallard, Pastis, Cucina Morini, and Namak for discount bites. Or, stop by longtime favorites like Central or Rasika for more delicious options (Mon-Sun, $25+, various participating locations).
    2. Future and Metro Boomin concert. Atlanta rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin bring their brooding beats and rhymes to Capital One Arena to promote two recent collaborative albums, We Don’t Trust You and We Still Don’t Trust You (Sat, $134+, Capital One Arena).
    3. “MJ the Musical.The highly-anticipated MJ the Musical arrives at National Theatre after a Tony award-winning stint on Broadway. The touring show created by Christopher Wheeldon and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage will run in DC for a few weeks, bringing Michael Jackson’s electrifying hits back to the stage (Tues-September 8, $45+, Downtown).
    4. Arlington County Fair. Arlington County Fair is back this summer at Thomas Jefferson Community Center with a ton of festive fun for all ages. Kids can exercise and venture through obstacle courses on the Kids Court, families can groove to local bands in the entertainment tent, and there’s hotdogs, seafood, and ice cream at Food Truck Alley (Wed-Sun, free, Arlington).
    5. “West Wing” cast at Sixth & I. To mark the 25th  anniversary of  The West Wing, cast members Melissa Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack will discuss the show’s impact at Sixth & I (Sat, $40 for ticket and signed book, $12+ for virtual, Downtown).
    6. Alexandria Restaurant Week. More than 90 eateries and lounges are serving multi-course dinner menus for Alexandria Restaurant Week. Foodies can dine at neighborhood places such as Beeliner Diner, Cheesetique, and Don Taco, for prices starting at $27.50—a nod to Alexandria’s 275th birthday (Fri through August 25, $27+, Alexandria).


Want More Things to Do?

Arts and culture:

  • Check out paintings, prints, and other artworks from “Golden: Fifty Years of New Classics” at MOCA Arlington (through September 8, free, Arlington).
  • Author Briana Pegado inspires readers to Make Good Trouble. Learn self-care tips from her at Solid State Books (Mon, free, $21 for the book, H Street Corridor).
  • Discover DC’s unique places and hidden gems with author JoAnn Hill at the library (Tues, free, Northeast DC).
  • YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen visits Sixth & I with his debut book, Shameless: Republicans’ Deliberate Dysfunction and the Battle to Preserve Democracy (Wed, $20+ for in-person, $12+ for virtual, Downtown).
  • Create-your-own leaf rubbing print at Shop Made in DC (Wed, $30, Georgetown).
  • Evan Friss surveys the country’s book industry in his new book, The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore (Wed, free, Northwest DC).
  • View short documentaries and narrative films from local producers and creatives at the DC Black Film Festival at Miracle Theatre (Thurs- August 25, $15+, Eastern Market).
  • Artist Tuan Andrew Nguyen makes a DC debut with the multimedia installation “The Island” (Fri-May 4, 2025,  free, Smithsonian American Art Museum).
  • Make a new friend, or lover, at WHINO’s Single’s Mixer. There’s bingo, speed dating, and a live DJ (Sat, $12+, Arlington).
  • Sneaker Con returns to Walter E. Washington Convention Center for a two-day showcase of the trendiest kicks (Sat-Sun, $30+, Mount Vernon Square).
  • Attend a collaging workshop with artist Helina Metaferia at the Phillips Collection (Sun, $20, Dupont).

Community and heritage:

  • Learn about historic sewn objects from DAR Museum experts (Tues, free, but registration is encouraged, virtual, Downtown).
  • Learn about the Civil War and its connection to Western medicine from author Carole Adrienne (Tues, $10, virtual).

Theater and shows:

  • Explore the themes of music, family, and Greece in this revival of Mamma Mia! (Tues through September 1, $49+, Kennedy Center).
  • Centerstage Academy for the Arts performs In the Heights (Thurs-Fri, $60, Bowie).
  • This lively event invites concertgoers to sing-along to a movie screening of The Sound of Music (Fri, $29+, Vienna).
  • Comedian and actor Ben Schwartz performs with friends at the Anthem (Fri, $49+, Wharf).

Music and concerts:

  • Pianist Five for Fighting plays soft rock music at Lincoln Theatre (Tues, $35, U Street Corridor).
  • Supreme Commander, Cryptid Summer, and Drivel rock the library with a rooftop punk concert (Wed, free, MLK Library).
  • Go-go groovers The Experience Band & Show perform at Rock the Dock (Wed, free, Wharf).
  • Rock out to AFI’s hardcore-punk rhythms at Merriweather Post Pavilion (Thurs, $25+, Columbia).
  • ’90s and ’00s beats keep the party vibes going at You Know the Vibes Social Pop Up (Sat, free+, Dupont).

Get involved:

  • Participate in a vegetation cleanup of Rosslyn Trail (Tues, free, Arlington).
  • Eat sausages, dance to live bands, and go to a foam party for a good cause. Sausagefest at Wunder Garten is helping to raise funds for the new DC LGBTQ+ Community Center (Sat-Sun, free, NoMa).

Bites and beverages:

  • The Yards’ first-ever Bark Crawl invites humans and their four-legged companions to bar-hop at area restaurants such as Trouble, La Famosa, and Emmy Squared (Wed, free, Navy Yard).
  • Celebrate all things tomato at Common Good City Farm’s Tomato Party (Thurs, free, but donations welcome, Shaw).
  • Bourbon connoisseurs and beer aficionados can sample drinks at Virginia Bourbon and Beer Festival (Sat, $40+, Fredericksburg).

Budget-friendly:

  • Stroll through the scenic US Botanic Gardens after hours for ice cream and mocktails (Thurs, free, Southwest DC).
  • Shop candles, clothes, and other goods from small businesses at the Unique Markets summer pop-up (Sat, free+, Union Market).
  • There’s good energy, music, and food trucks at Sandlot Georgetown’s day party (Sat, free+, Georgetown).

Plan ahead: 

  • Jerry Seinfield arrives at Wolf Trap to perform two shows (August 19-20, $55+, Vienna).

Things to do with kids:

  • It’s the final week to attend the 75th Montgomery County Fair  (closes Sat, $12+ for adults, free for ages 11 and under, Gaithersburg).
  • Take your kids to a horse show at Prince William County Fair before it closes (closes Sat, $25 for adults, $15 for children, Manassas).
  • There are rides and attractions for kiddos at the Clarke County Fair (closes Sun, $10 for adults, free+ for children, Berryville).
  • Students can pick up school supplies and play games at this community field day (Sun, donations welcome, Anacostia).

If you enjoyed these events, please don’t forget to share this post with a friend on social media, and sign up for our newsletter for more things to do.

Briana A. Thomas is a local journalist, historian, and tour guide who specializes in the research of D.C. history and culture. She is the author of the Black history book, Black Broadway in Washington, D.C., a story that was first published in Washingtonian in 2016.

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Woman from viral Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ to speak at DC convention

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Woman from viral Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ to speak at DC convention


Kristin Cabot, the woman who went viral after being singled out on a “kiss cam” at a Coldplay concert, is set to speak at a conference in Washington, D.C.

Cabot is set to speak at PR Week’s Crisis Comms Conference on April 16, according to the event’s website. She is set to talk about “taking back the narrative,” the website reads.

RELATED | Astronomer CPO Kristin Cabot resigns after Coldplay concert scandal

“During this session, the former Astronomer chief people officer and her PR representative, industry legend Dini von Mueffling, share the strategy — both immediate and long-term — that has helped Cabot take control of her narrative and rewrite her story,” the event description reads.

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Cabot is billed as “Former Chief People Officer at Astronomer, HR Expert, Anti-Bullying Advocate” on the website.

Cabot and Astronomer CEO Andy Byron were caught in an embrace on camera in July. Seconds later, the pair attempted to hide.

“Either they’re having an affair or they’re very shy,” lead singer Chris Martin said in a video of the event.

RELATED | Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ exec Kristin Cabot finally breaks her silence on her ‘bad decision’

Following the event, Cabot said she faced bullying and harassment online.

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“She began receiving unending vitriol, harassment, and myriad death threats,” her keynote speaker bio said on the event’s website. ” She now advocates against ritual public shaming.”

The event is set to take place at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center along Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C.

Tickets run $875 for an individual. Groups of three to five people can get tickets for $775 per person.



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After immigration arrest near DC school, how an educator and officer found common ground

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After immigration arrest near DC school, how an educator and officer found common ground


More complaints were filed against D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department in 2025 than ever before, the News4 I-Team has learned. Weekly complaints increased after federal officers and agents surged into the city in August, often working side by side with D.C. police officers.

The head of a charter school in D.C. filed a complaint after federal immigration authorities and D.C. officers questioned two young men outside her school, in view of students. A comment by one D.C. officer was especially damaging. Months later, the educator and officer met in a mediation session and found some common ground.

As D.C.’s Bilingual Public Charter School in Fort Totten was dismissing students on Sept. 25, a caravan of federal authorities and D.C. police arrived and questioned two men who were not connected to the school.

“I went out there right away. This is my school, and I’m going to protect it, and I’m going to make sure all the kids are safe,” school CEO Daniela Anello told News4.

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Cellphone video shows the encounter as the two men in handcuffs sat on a curb.

“If you do not get on the sidewalk, you’ll be arrested for failure to obey a traffic officer,” one D.C. officer warns people gathering.

“Can you tell us what they’re being arrested for?” a woman asks.

“It’s none of your business,” a D.C. officer replies.

It was an incident – among many reported by News4 last year – in which federal immigration authorities took someone into custody alongside D.C. police.

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“Do you see who’s watching you? These are children that you’re doing this in front of!” a woman yells.

At one point, a D.C. officer made this comment: “If you have such a problem with us, don’t call 911 next time.”

Anello thought he went too far and his message clashed with what she teaches her students.

“That was very puzzling to me, because we’ve taught our kids over and over: If there’s something harmful, dangerous or scary, you call 911 and the police will come and help you. So that was very upsetting,” she said.

The stop eventually ended when the men were taken into custody.

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‘Students cried, asking their parents if they too would be taken away’

The encounter led to several complaints against D.C. police. Concerned about what her students and staff had witnessed, Anello filed a complaint. She also wrote Mayor Muriel Bowser but said she never heard back. News4 reached out to Bowser’s office too.

She did hear from then-Chief of Police Pamela Smith after speaking out at public meetings and testifying before the D.C. Council.

“Students cried, asking their parents if they too would be taken away,” Anello said at a round table.

She filed her complaint with D.C.’s Office of Police Complaints (OPC), an independent agency that investigates complaints against officers in the District. It was one of 1,065 complaints received last year, according to the agency. While complaints are not always found to be misconduct, this is the most complaints the office has received in a year.

“I was complaining about how the police responded in a moment of high stress outside of the school community when kids and staff and community members are watching,” Anello said.

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Rebuilding community trust in police

In an interview with the I-Team, OPC Director Marke Cross said he wasn’t surprised 2025 was a record year for complaints.

“We expected there would be a lot more complaints about stops and searches and frisks and things like that,” he said.

Cross said he can’t be sure why there was an increase in complaints; that analysis is ongoing. But he said it points to a level of trust in police that may need to be rebuilt.

“The topic of community trust in the police department in D.C. has a long history,” he said.

News4 asked if 2025 was a particularly hard year for community trust.

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“Um, yes. Yes, it has been,” he replied.

A News4 analysis of OPC data shows a 17% increase in weekly complaints after the federal surge began in August. That included allegations on intimidation, property mishandling, and officer language and conduct.

Alicia Yass, who now works for the ACLU, previously served as OPC’s deputy director.

“I think they should be trying to do better. I mean, all of us should always be trying to do better at our jobs. This is not just the police, but the police are being given evidence of what they could be doing better,” she said.

Cross said investigators review and investigate every complaint – reviewing witness statements, body-worn camera video and police reports. After that, only a very small percentage of complaints are upheld. Anello’s was among those.

News4 asked her how much trust-building she thought D.C. police need to do.

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“Oh, a lot,” she replied.

School leader describes her mediation session with officer who snapped at crowd

Months after Anello filed her complaint with OPC, she was offered mediation with the officer who snapped at the crowd that day, telling them not to call 911 if they had a problem with police. Their two-hour session was confidential, according to the agency’s rules, but she shared how it felt for her.

“I can say that I received the apology that I was seeking,” she said.

News4 asked, how did that feel?

“Amazing,” she said. “To feel that there was the connection between what I would have wanted to have happened and the police officer’s realization of, ‘Yes, I could have done this better.’ That connected us.”

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While OPC can’t take direct disciplinary action against officers, it can make recommendations to D.C. police. There is no automatic mention of the OPC process in an officer’s police personnel file.

But at a time when police and community relations need rebuilding, Anello still believes there’s value in the process and said she hopes her complaint and the hundreds of others this year will change police behavior.

“We had a moment of, ‘You care, I care. We’re both professionals. We’re both trying to keep our communities safe. We’re just going about it in slightly different ways with different roles,’” she said.

OPC’s director said the agency plans to make recommendations to MPD soon based on last year’s complaints, including on the impact of the federal surge.

Interim Chief of Police Jeffery Carroll declined to talk with News4 on camera. We also asked for an interview with the officer who Anello met with; he declined.

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An MPD spokesperson said the department hasn’t been briefed about the rise in complaints but plans to provide a more detailed strategy for community outreach in the coming months.

The department said in a statement: “There is nothing more important to MPD than maintaining the trust of DC residents, and we appreciate our community’s partnership and support of our efforts to drive significant reductions in crime over the last two years.

MPD leadership is committed to listening to community concerns, and that’s why our leaders regularly attend Advisory Neighborhood Commission meetings, why MPD has a Citizens Advisory Council, and why we regularly host community walks in all seven police districts. We understand the need to enhance outreach districtwide to ensure we are maintaining trust.”

A Maryland lawmaker is proposing a bill that would authorize the Maryland attorney general and state police to gather identifying digital data about agents who are the subject of misconduct complaints. News4’s Mauricio Casillas reports.



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DC National Guard shooting suspect pleads not guilty to 9 charges

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DC National Guard shooting suspect pleads not guilty to 9 charges


The man accused of shooting two National Guard members in Washington, D.C., in November pleaded not guilty Wednesday to nine federal charges stemming from the incident. 

Attorneys for 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal pleaded on his behalf in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, according to NewsNation’s Mark Lucivero. Lakanwal is charged with first-degree murder while armed, assault with intent to kill while armed, illegal possession of a firearm and six related charges.

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The 29-year-old Lakanwal, who was hospitalized after the incident after he was shot by another Guard member, was present in court Wednesday in a wheelchair and relied on a translator throughout the hearing. 

Twice, Lakanwal’s lawyers and translator had to briefly pause proceedings to explain to him what was happening. 

Lakanwal, an Afghan national, is accused of shooting U.S. Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, 20, and U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, both members of the West Virginia National Guard, near Farragut Square Metro Station in the area of 17th and I streets NW. 

Beckstrom died from her injuries the day after the shooting. Wolfe’s mother, Melody Wolfe, wrote on Facebook over the weekend that her son remains in an in-patient rehab facility and is ready to begin an 8 to 12 week residential rehab program.

“Physically, Andy has healed really well and he will be having his cranioplasty (skull reconstruction) in early March,” she added. “It’s a very routine surgery and will allow for even more independence and recovery.”

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When U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta asked federal prosecutors Wednesday whether they would pursue additional charges that would allow them to seek the death penalty in the case, they briefly deliberated before telling the judge they are pursuing “death-eligible charges.”

Attorney General Pam Bondi said in November, before Beckstrom died, that the Justice Department will seek the death penalty against Lakanwal.

“If something happens, I will tell you right now, I will tell you early, we will do everything in our power to seek the death penalty against that monster,” Bondi said on Fox News.

Mehta set the next hearing date in the case for May 6.

Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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