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
MPD searching for 2 suspects in Northeast DC convenience store break-in
WASHINGTON – The Metropolitan Police Department is searching for two people who broke into a Quick Stop in Northeast Washington, D.C., last month.
What we know:
The robbery happened just after 5 a.m. on March 21. Two suspects were seen on security video breaking into a Quick Stop store on Bladensburg Road.
The thieves broke the lock of the front door, destroying the entrance, police said, before grabbing some money and items before driving off.
The MPD said the suspects drove off in a black Nissan Altima with a Washington, D.C., license plate with the number DU2168.
What you can do:
The MPD is still investigating the burglary, and asked anyone who could potentially identify either suspect to contact police at 202-727-9099.
The Source: Information in this story is from the Metropolitan Police Department.
Washington, D.C
Are the TSA lines at DC area airports back to normal now?
See what it’s like in a long TSA line
Crowds grow as TSA lines remain long at airports nationwide, travelers share their experiences.
TSA checkpoints have mostly stabilized at airports throughout the country, with the Senate advancing a proposal Thursday to fund the Department of Homeland Security in a move that could signal the end of a partial government shutdown that began in February.
Travelers often experienced hours-long lines through TSA during March, as hundreds of agents quit or called out of work while not receiving paychecks.
But following the Senate proposal and President Donald Trump signing an order to pay TSA officers, lines have shrunk, including at airports in the Washington DC area.
Here’s what to know if you’re traveling out of the DC-area airports Thursday.
TSA Wait Times at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
As of 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, security checkpoint wait times at DCA are less than five minutes at all three terminals.
Wait times at all three terminals have mostly been under 10 minutes all week.
TSA Wait Times at Dulles International Airport
At Dulles (IAD), estimated wait times Wednesday morning are 0-15 minutes, according to the My TSA app.
Dulles says on its website screening lines “remain steady and within normal wait times.”
TSA Wait Times at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport
Lines are a little bit longer at BWI Thursday, but they still pale in comparison to last week’s lines that stretched outside the airport.
As of 10:30 a.m., the estimated wait times at BWI are 15 to 30 minutes, the My TSA app shows.
Washington, D.C
Another person arrested after man found dead and tied up in Logan Circle apartment
WASHINGTON (7News) — A second person linked to the murder of a D.C. man in his Logan Circle apartment was arrested over a month after the incident, according to the Metropolitan Police Department.
Wednesday’s arrest of D.C. man Alphonso Walker, 39, came two days after police arrested Rico Barnes, both for charges stemming from the death of Syed Hussain, 40, in the 1400 block of Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest. Walker was already in police custody for separate charges.
PREVIOUS | Arrest made weeks after body found bound, burned in Logan Circle apartment
Police said Monday that the pair followed Hussain back to his residence on Feb. 11 and attacked him shortly after he opened the door to the apartment lobby at around 1:40 a.m. The pair forced him into his apartment and stole items inside, police said about the motive.
Charging documents included surveillance images showing the men leaving the apartment with bags of clothing and a bicycle, among other items, about an hour after they entered.
At around 3:30 a.m. that same day, D.C. Fire and EMS crews were called to the apartment to extinguish a fire and found Hussain injured and unresponsive. He was declared dead at the scene.
Officials said Hussain’s cause of death was blunt force trauma and strangulation, and investigators said the fire was caused after the man died.
Barnes was arrested on Monday and accused of felony first-degree murder while armed. Walker will face the same charge, police said.
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