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Bringing community-verified accessible dining recommendations to every stop on the I'mPossible 2026 national tour. Because the show shouldn't be the only accessible part of your evening.
We're happy to announce that ROLLIN is partnering with Omnium Circus -- the world's only comprehensively inclusive and accessible circus -- to bring community-verified accessible dining and venue recommendations to Omnium attendees across the country.
The partnership launches with Omnium's I'mPossible 2026 national tour, kicking off at the Warner Theatre in Washington, DC on March 1, 2026. From opening night forward, Omnium attendees will be able to use ROLLIN to find wheelchair accessible restaurants, bars, and venues near every tour stop -- scored and verified by the community that actually needs them.
This is the kind of partnership that feels obvious in hindsight. When an organization builds the most accessible live entertainment experience in the world, the question that follows is simple: what about everything else? Where do you eat before the show? Where do you go after? And how do you know those places are actually accessible?
That's where ROLLIN comes in.
Omnium Circus is not an adaptation of an existing show. It was built from the ground up to be comprehensively inclusive. Over 25% of Omnium's performers are members of the disabled community, and every element of the production -- from the rigging to the script to the audience experience -- is designed with accessibility as a first principle, not an afterthought.
The show is led by Malik Paris, Omnium's deaf Ringmaster who performs in ASL, bringing a visual language to the center ring that most audiences have never experienced. Featured performer Mandy Harvey, the deaf singer and songwriter who received the Golden Buzzer on America's Got Talent, rounds out a cast that redefines what a circus can be.
Omnium doesn't bolt on accessibility features. They are the show. Every performance includes:
Their 2026 show, I'mPossible, launches its national tour at the Warner Theatre in Washington, DC. It's a celebration of what becomes possible when you stop designing for the average and start designing for everyone.
Omnium has solved accessibility inside the venue. ROLLIN handles everything outside it. When you're going to a show, you also need to know where to eat before or after -- and whether those restaurants are actually wheelchair accessible. Not "accessible" in the vague, checkbox sense. Actually accessible: level entry, accessible restrooms, accessible parking, verified by people who use wheelchairs.
ROLLIN provides community-verified accessibility scores for 105,000+ locations across 15 states. Each location is scored on a 0-100 scale based on real accessibility features -- not a single "yes/no" checkbox, but detailed data on the specific things that matter: Can you get through the door? Is there a ramp? Is the restroom actually usable?
For the DC tour launch, this means immediate access to 3,100+ scored locations across the Washington, DC metro area. Omnium attendees heading to the Warner Theatre can search ROLLIN for wheelchair accessible restaurants, cafes, and bars nearby -- sorted by accessibility score, distance, or cuisine -- and plan their evening with confidence.
As the I'mPossible tour moves to new cities, ROLLIN's data follows. With coverage across New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois, Colorado, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, attendees at future tour stops will have the same access to verified dining information.
Partnerships work in both directions. Omnium doesn't just distribute ROLLIN's data -- they help make it better. Omnium's community -- performers, staff, and attendees with disabilities -- represents exactly the people ROLLIN is built for. Their lived experience with accessibility challenges, across cities and venues nationwide, informs what data matters most.
When a performer who uses a wheelchair tells us that parking distance matters more than parking existence, that changes how we weight our scores. When attendees report that a restaurant's "accessible entrance" is actually a service door through the kitchen, that feedback makes our data more honest. When Omnium's touring team identifies gaps in our coverage for a new city, that helps us prioritize where to expand next.
ROLLIN's data gets smarter when the people who rely on it most are actively involved in shaping it. Omnium's community gives us that direct line.
ROLLIN's platform already supports community feedback -- any user can confirm or correct accessibility information for any location, and that feedback is verified and folded back into our scores. Omnium's audience expands that feedback loop significantly. Thousands of attendees across a national tour, many of whom navigate accessibility challenges daily, contributing real-world observations about the restaurants and venues around each tour stop.
That's not a marketing partnership. That's a data partnership.
Accessibility is often treated as a feature -- something you add to an existing experience. Omnium Circus proves it can be the foundation. ROLLIN proves the same thing for dining and venue data. When both exist in the same ecosystem, something meaningful happens.
A person who uses a wheelchair can buy a ticket to I'mPossible knowing the show was designed for them. They can search ROLLIN for a restaurant near the Warner Theatre that has level entry, an accessible restroom, and accessible parking. They can book a reservation with confidence. They can plan their entire evening -- not just the show, but dinner before and drinks after -- without making a single phone call to ask "are you really accessible?"
That's what infrastructure looks like. Not one organization solving everything, but complementary systems that cover different parts of the same problem. The cultural layer -- live entertainment that doesn't exclude anyone. The data layer -- verified accessibility information that removes the guesswork from every decision around it.
We're proud to work with Omnium Circus on building that infrastructure. This is just the beginning.
Search accessible restaurants near the Warner Theatre, explore DC's 3,100+ scored locations, or grab your tickets to the show.