Washington, D.C
Capitals, Wizards Owner Interested in ‘Consolidating’ D.C. Teams, Including Nationals
Ted Leonsis hasn’t given up on the idea of buying the Washington Nationals.
The owner of both the Washington Capitals and the Washington Wizards talked about his “… high interest in consolidating sports teams in our region” during an interview with MOCO 360, released on Thursday.
Leonsis, a former executive with AOL among other businesses, has cornered the market on team ownership in the Washington D.C. area. Along with the Capitals and the Wizards, he also owns the G League’s Capital City Go-Go and the WNBA’s Washington Mystics.
He is also the founder, majority owner, chairman and CEO of Monumental Sports & Entertainment. Through Monumental, he runs the Monumental Sports Network, which he recently purchased from Comcast so he could control the TV rights for his teams.
Part of his desire to own another team in the market, whether it be the Nationals or the MLS’s D.C. United, is for more television programming.
“Owning a baseball team would double the amount of games and be year-round,” he said. “You can see from a business standpoint, that’s important.”
So, there’s clearly a business play for him, should be somehow acquire the Nationals. But, in the same breath, he also said that he didn’t “… want to buy a baseball team so I can get programming for the network.”
He rejects any notion that a team like the Nationals can’t compete with the New York Yankees, reasoning that by leveraging a combination of teams he can help all of them in free agency.
“But why it’s important for the team is, how can you define yourself as a big market team?” he said. “How can you attract free agents? How can you keep really good young players from going somewhere else? Which we have proven we do with my teams. Alex Ovechkin didn’t leave to go to a hockey market. He stayed and made it a hockey market.”
The Nationals had been exploring a sale since 2022. The Lerner family bought it from MLB in 2006 and Mark Lerner now controls the team. In February, Lerner told the Washington Post that the team was no longer for sale.
Where that leaves Leonsis’ interest is anyone’s guess. However, there could be another way for him to get Nationals programming on his network — if the Nets were to get their broadcast rights back.
As part of the deal that allowed the Nationals to move from Montreal, the Baltimore Orioles own the team’s broadcast rights. Winning those rights back could allow Washington to entertain working with Leonsis that way.
Washington, D.C
New AAPI-led Jaemi Theatre Company launches in DC
Jaemi Theatre Company, a new AAPI-led theater company based in Washington, DC, officially launches this spring with its inaugural project, BAAL, a staged reading at the 2026 Atlas INTERSECTIONS Festival on Friday, March 6, at 7:30 PM at the Atlas Performing Arts Center.
Founded by Artistic Director Youri Kim and Artistic Associate Juyoung Koh, Jaemi Theatre was born out of a recognition that DC, one of the largest theater markets in the United States, had no company dedicated to centering Asian stories or led by Asian artists. The name “Jaemi” comes from a Korean word meaning “fun,” and in its Sino-Korean form, 在美, means both “to live in America” and “to live in beauty.”
“I kept hearing from companies that it was hard to find Asian actors, and I heard it so often that I started to believe it myself,” said Youri Kim. “But through building community with other AAPI theater artists in the area, I realized the talent was always here. What was missing was the infrastructure to connect us. Jaemi is that infrastructure.”

BAAL, an original work written by Youri Kim (not to be confused with Bertolt Brecht’s 1918 play of the same name), is a body horror drama set in a dystopian city where the air is toxic and birth is outlawed. In the city of Baal, citizens are forced into an impossible choice: terminate or sacrifice a family member. The play uses the language of biological mutation and bodily control to examine how systems of power decide who gets to exist and on what terms, questions that resonate deeply within AAPI and immigrant communities navigating structures that seek to define, contain, and assimilate them. The staged reading features a cast of seven and an original sound design.
BAAL plays as a staged reading Friday, March 6, 2026, at 7:30 PM in Lab Theatre II at the Atlas Performing Arts Center (1333 H St NE, Washington, DC). Tickets ($29.75) are available online.
Looking ahead, Jaemi Theatre plans to host a founding party and fundraiser this fall, and will launch an Asian Writer Play Submission program in the second half of 2026. The program will pair playwrights from selected Asian countries with Asian playwrights based in DC for a workshop development process, building a pipeline that connects diasporic voices across borders.
For more information, visit yourikimdirector.com or follow @jaemitheatre on Instagram.
About Jaemi Theatre Company
Jaemi Theatre is a newly formed AAPI-led performance initiative based in Washington, DC, co-founded by Artistic Director Youri Kim and Artistic Associate Juyoung Koh. “Jaemi” is Korean for “fun” and, in its Sino-Korean form, means “to live in America” and “to live in beauty.” The company creates interdisciplinary performance rooted in diasporic imagination and radical storytelling. Jaemi is a home for the unfinished and the unassimilated, where performance holds contradiction without needing to resolve it.
Washington, D.C
San Francisco Ballet cancels upcoming performances at Kennedy Center
Sunday, March 1, 2026 6:36AM
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — The San Francisco Ballet board has voted to cancel its upcoming performances at the Kennedy Center.
The company is scheduled for a four-day run in Washington D.C. in May.
Petition urges SF Ballet to cancel Kennedy Center tour stop as company opens 2026 season
Last year, Pres. Donald Trump overhauled the Kennedy Center’s board, including naming himself the chairman.
That led several artists to cancel scheduled performances.
A statement from SF Ballet says the group “looks forward to performing for Washington, D.C. audiences in the future.”
Copyright © 2026 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Washington, D.C
97-year-old World War II veteran honored virtually at home
At 97, Veteran Harley Wero wasn’t up for a trip to the nation’s capital, so volunteers from the Western North Dakota honor flight brought the trip to him. Wero, his wife Muriel and their daughter Jennifer got to experience Washington, DC, without ever leaving their home.
Web Editor : Sydney Ross
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