What to do in Paris

Paris Buzzes With World Cup Fever, Open-Air Concerts, and Pride Celebrations This Week

3 min · 18. juni 2026
episode Paris Buzzes With World Cup Fever, Open-Air Concerts, and Pride Celebrations This Week cover

Beskrivelse

Paris is humming this week, so if listeners are in the city or planning a quick escape, there is a lot to dive into. According to Sortir à Paris, the big backdrop to the next few days is World Cup fever. France’s opening match is sparking outdoor screenings across the city, especially around fan zones and lively café terraces, where listeners can soak in the atmosphere with a cold drink and a tricolor flag painted on their cheeks. Sortir à Paris notes that many bars in République, Bastille, and around Grands Boulevards are turning into impromptu fan villages, with special menus and late-night hours. Today, Sortir à Paris also highlights several one-off events for Thursday. There are exhibitions that are in their final days before closing at the end of June, including immersive digital art shows and photography retrospectives scattered from the Marais to the 16th arrondissement. Their “last days in June 2026” guide points listeners toward shows that will not be around much longer, making this week the perfect moment to catch them before they disappear. For nightlife tonight, Songkick lists an electro and club night at Nouveau Casino in the 11th arrondissement, featuring AMNE, Euro5tar, and Venti. Nouveau Casino, on Rue Oberkampf, is a classic Paris venue, and this lineup promises a sweaty, late-night party in one of the city’s most reliably energetic neighborhoods. It is ideal if listeners are looking for a local, underground vibe rather than a touristy soirée. Looking to the weekend, Sortir à Paris reports that Fête de la Musique is the star of the week. As the city’s streets, squares, and courtyards turn into open-air stages, listeners can drift from jazz on a quiet side street in the Latin Quarter to indie bands in Canal Saint-Martin, to DJs under the arches of Châtelet. Many concerts are free, and part of the fun is simply wandering and letting the sounds pull you from one corner of Paris to another. Culture lovers should also keep an ear out for classical concerts at Sainte-Chapelle, described by Theatre in Paris as an ongoing series running through 2026. These one-hour evening performances bathe listeners in baroque and classical music beneath jewel-toned stained glass, right on Île de la Cité. It is a magical contrast to the noisy terraces and football chants outside. According to the Hotels Paris Rive Gauche blog, the city is already gearing up for Paris Gay Pride 2026, which will bring a massive parade and DJ sets through central Paris on Saturday the 27th. Even though that is next weekend, preparations, themed parties, and rainbow decorations will start appearing around the Marais and along major boulevards this week, giving listeners an early taste of one of the city’s most festive events. Between football fan zones, one-night concerts, exhibitions in their final days, and the buildup to Fête de la Musique and Pride, Paris this week is all about being outside, drifting from event to event, and letting the city surprise you around every corner. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on what to do, where to go, and how to make the most of your week. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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episode Paris Buzzes With World Cup Fever, Open-Air Concerts, and Pride Celebrations This Week cover

Paris Buzzes With World Cup Fever, Open-Air Concerts, and Pride Celebrations This Week

Paris is humming this week, so if listeners are in the city or planning a quick escape, there is a lot to dive into. According to Sortir à Paris, the big backdrop to the next few days is World Cup fever. France’s opening match is sparking outdoor screenings across the city, especially around fan zones and lively café terraces, where listeners can soak in the atmosphere with a cold drink and a tricolor flag painted on their cheeks. Sortir à Paris notes that many bars in République, Bastille, and around Grands Boulevards are turning into impromptu fan villages, with special menus and late-night hours. Today, Sortir à Paris also highlights several one-off events for Thursday. There are exhibitions that are in their final days before closing at the end of June, including immersive digital art shows and photography retrospectives scattered from the Marais to the 16th arrondissement. Their “last days in June 2026” guide points listeners toward shows that will not be around much longer, making this week the perfect moment to catch them before they disappear. For nightlife tonight, Songkick lists an electro and club night at Nouveau Casino in the 11th arrondissement, featuring AMNE, Euro5tar, and Venti. Nouveau Casino, on Rue Oberkampf, is a classic Paris venue, and this lineup promises a sweaty, late-night party in one of the city’s most reliably energetic neighborhoods. It is ideal if listeners are looking for a local, underground vibe rather than a touristy soirée. Looking to the weekend, Sortir à Paris reports that Fête de la Musique is the star of the week. As the city’s streets, squares, and courtyards turn into open-air stages, listeners can drift from jazz on a quiet side street in the Latin Quarter to indie bands in Canal Saint-Martin, to DJs under the arches of Châtelet. Many concerts are free, and part of the fun is simply wandering and letting the sounds pull you from one corner of Paris to another. Culture lovers should also keep an ear out for classical concerts at Sainte-Chapelle, described by Theatre in Paris as an ongoing series running through 2026. These one-hour evening performances bathe listeners in baroque and classical music beneath jewel-toned stained glass, right on Île de la Cité. It is a magical contrast to the noisy terraces and football chants outside. According to the Hotels Paris Rive Gauche blog, the city is already gearing up for Paris Gay Pride 2026, which will bring a massive parade and DJ sets through central Paris on Saturday the 27th. Even though that is next weekend, preparations, themed parties, and rainbow decorations will start appearing around the Marais and along major boulevards this week, giving listeners an early taste of one of the city’s most festive events. Between football fan zones, one-night concerts, exhibitions in their final days, and the buildup to Fête de la Musique and Pride, Paris this week is all about being outside, drifting from event to event, and letting the city surprise you around every corner. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on what to do, where to go, and how to make the most of your week. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

18. juni 20263 min
episode Paris Buzzes With Culture, Music, and Sports This Week cover

Paris Buzzes With Culture, Music, and Sports This Week

Paris is buzzing this week, and if you’re in the city, you’ve picked a perfect time to explore, celebrate, and soak up some culture. This morning, language lovers can head to the Alliance Française de Paris on Boulevard Raspail for “IMPACT – 5 Strategies for Learning French More Effectively,” a friendly A2-level workshop from 10 to 11:30 a.m. According to the Alliance Française de Paris, it’s designed for motivated beginners who want practical tips, interactive exercises, and guidance from experienced teachers in a classic Left Bank setting. It’s a great way for listeners to sharpen their French before diving into the rest of the week. Over by the Seine, European space fans have something a bit different. SpacePolicyOnline notes that the European Space Agency is holding a media briefing this afternoon at ESA headquarters in Paris, sharing the outcomes of the 347th ESA Council session and an update on reboosting the SWIFT mission. While the teleconference itself is for media, ESA’s HQ area near the Champs-de-Mars is a fun excuse to wander, grab a café terrace seat, and feel close to the heart of European space policy. Music lovers should mark their calendars for a big night at Bercy. The Accor Arena announces that British soul-pop singer Olivia Dean is performing there this evening, with Alice Phoebe Lou opening the show. Expect a warm, laid-back, very London-meets-Paris vibe, with Olivia Dean’s intimate storytelling and soulful arrangements filling one of Paris’s most iconic arenas. It’s a perfect option for listeners looking for a concert that feels both modern and cozy. For the rest of the week, Sortir à Paris highlights a lineup built around sport, music, and long, late-Parisian evenings. According to Sortir à Paris, France’s opening match in the 2026 World Cup is the headline sporting event, turning bars, brasseries, and fan zones across the city into noisy, tricolor-filled viewing parties. Listeners can expect packed terraces around Bastille, Oberkampf, and Canal Saint-Martin when kickoff comes. The same guide points to fencing events in the capital, a nod to Paris’s deep sporting tradition and to the city’s role on the global sports stage. For a more dreamlike experience, there’s also a “fairy night” style event later this week, with illuminated gardens, light installations, and a magical, after-dark atmosphere perfect for an evening stroll with friends or a date. As the weekend approaches, Sortir à Paris notes that Father’s Day programming mixes brunches, special menus in bistros, river cruises on the Seine, and family-friendly outings in parks and museums. For music and festival fans, Hellfest 2026 is roaring outside Paris, but its energy spills into the city through rock-focused bars and parties that embrace the heavy sound and festival spirit. Throughout the week, Parisian theaters are offering a rich mix of concerts, plays, and stand-up comedy, with French and international performers filling stages large and small. Listeners can easily pair a museum afternoon with an apéro on a terrace and then catch a show in the evening, making the most of these long early-summer days. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening in Paris and beyond. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

I går3 min
episode Paris This Week: Rooftop Cocktails, Techno Nights, and Stained Glass Concerts cover

Paris This Week: Rooftop Cocktails, Techno Nights, and Stained Glass Concerts

Paris is buzzing this week, so let’s dive right into what listeners can actually do in the city over the coming days. If you want to start with a skyline moment, Songkick lists indie pop artist Eli! playing a rooftop concert at Skybar Paris Rooftop at the Pullman Montparnasse this evening, a perfect excuse to sip a cocktail while the sun goes down over the Left Bank. For another outdoor vibe, Shazam and Shotgun both highlight an electronic night with Danish trio WhoMadeWho at the Hippodrome de Vincennes, as part of a broader house and melodic techno program that rolls through the weekend at this vast open-air venue on the eastern edge of Paris. Art lovers are spoiled right now. The Centre Pompidou calendar shows the final day of “Kandinsky face aux images,” a major exhibition exploring how the abstract master engaged with photographs, prints, and popular imagery; it runs during regular museum hours and is ideal for a late-afternoon cultural fix before dinner. The same calendar features “Rosa Barba: White Museum,” an evening installation on Place Igor Stravinsky with projections animating the square between 9:30 pm and 1 am, turning the fountains and the Pompidou façade into a kind of open-air cinema for experimental art. If classical music is more your tempo, Theatre in Paris details the ongoing Sainte-Chapelle Concert Series, with nightly one-hour performances at 8 pm inside the jewel-box Gothic chapel on Île de la Cité. Listeners sit beneath walls of stained glass while string ensembles and chamber groups perform Vivaldi, Mozart, and other favorites; premium tickets even include champagne afterward at a nearby brasserie, making it a romantic midweek or weekend treat. Looking ahead to the rest of the week, Sortir à Paris has a dedicated guide to “What to do in Paris this week, June 15–21, 2026,” pointing to citywide build-up to the Fête de la Musique, France’s World Cup opener screened in bars and fan zones, plus family events and late-night cultural happenings that will keep neighborhoods from Bastille to Montmartre lively well into the weekend. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening in Paris. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

14. juni 20262 min
episode Paris This Week: Art, Music, and Unforgettable Cultural Moments cover

Paris This Week: Art, Music, and Unforgettable Cultural Moments

Paris is buzzing this week with a mix of art, music, and a few very Parisian “don’t-miss-it” experiences. According to Sortiraparis, this is the week for big city energy, with standout outings including the World Cup kickoff atmosphere, Archaeology Days, the Provins Medieval Festival, a David Guetta concert, and a sumo tournament, making the city feel lively well beyond the usual café-and-boulevard rhythm.[7] For listeners who want something immersive and visually striking, the Centre Pompidou calendar highlights Rosa Barba at Place Igor Stravinsky from June 11 to 14, running late into the night from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., which makes it a strong choice for an evening outing downtown.[3] The same calendar also points to Maison Pompidou continuing until August 17, plus other major summer programming across Paris, so this is a good week to plan around museum hours and evening openings.[3] If the mood leans more theatrical, Theatre in Paris lists Sainte-Chapelle concert nights throughout the weekend, including Saturday and Sunday performances at 8 p.m. in one of the city’s most beautiful historic settings.[4] The venue notes that each concert lasts about an hour and recommends arriving at least 40 minutes early, which makes it an ideal pre-dinner cultural stop in the heart of the Île de la Cité.[4] For a more street-art-forward plan, My Guide Paris highlights Expo Street art Paris - Zoo Art Show, where a building is transformed into a collective artwork by 500 international street artists.[1] That kind of event is very Paris right now: bold, temporary, and worth crossing town for before it disappears from the calendar.[1] And if listeners are looking ahead to the weekend vibe, Paris Tourisme’s concert calendar shows that the city’s summer festival season is already in motion, with major music programming like Paris l’Été, Solidays, and Festival de Saint-Denis shaping the soundtrack of the season.[8] That means the rest of the week is perfect for pairing one big-ticket event with a slower Paris moment, like a riverside walk or a late-night terrace stop afterward. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

13. juni 20262 min
episode Paris This Week: Summer Vibes, Art, and Riverside Sunsets cover

Paris This Week: Summer Vibes, Art, and Riverside Sunsets

Paris is buzzing this week, so if you’re in the city, you’ve picked the right time to explore. Let’s dive into what you can do over the next few days, from riverside strolls to late-night concerts. According to the official Paris tourist office, the banks of the Seine are in full summer mode right now, with pop-up bars, deck chairs, and open-air stages set up along the Berges de Seine between Musée d’Orsay and Invalides. In the evenings, listeners can expect live DJ sets, small acoustic concerts, and plenty of food trucks serving everything from crêpes to Lebanese mezze. It’s one of the best spots to catch sunset over the river and the Eiffel Tower. The Louvre is hosting a major temporary exhibition focused on the influence of Italian artists on French painting, as reported by the Musée du Louvre program. Tickets are timed-entry, and evenings are the sweet spot: fewer crowds, cooler temperatures, and the museum’s iconic glass pyramid glowing as you leave. For something more contemporary, the Centre Pompidou’s current show on digital and immersive art, highlighted in its official calendar, offers interactive installations that respond to movement and sound, perfect for listeners who like art they can step into. Fans of fashion and design should head to the Palais Galliera, Paris’s fashion museum, which is featuring a retrospective on 1990s couture, according to the City of Paris cultural agenda. Expect bold silhouettes, runway footage, and a behind-the-scenes look at the ateliers that defined that decade. As the weekend approaches, Parc de la Villette in northeastern Paris becomes a cultural playground. The venue’s events page notes open-air concerts on the prairie lawns, with a mix of jazz, world music, and electro throughout the weekend. Pack a blanket, grab a picnic from a nearby bakery, and settle in for an evening under the stars. If you’re into classical music, the Philharmonie de Paris has late-week performances featuring a mix of symphonic favorites and more experimental programs. Their schedule highlights accessible concerts with introductory talks in English and French, ideal for listeners who might be new to classical music but curious to give it a try. Sports fans should keep an eye on the Parc des Princes and the Stade de France listings, where friendly football matches and athletic events are scheduled through the weekend, creating a lively atmosphere in bars across the city each evening. Finally, don’t miss the neighborhood events: the official mairie websites for districts like the 11th and 18th arrondissements list street markets, small fêtes de quartier, and outdoor film screenings in local squares. These are perfect places to mingle with locals, discover small wine producers, and hear live music up close. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening in Paris and beyond. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

12. juni 20263 min