Things to do in Orlando

Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide

5 min · 21. maj 2026
episode Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide cover

Description

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI globe-trotting sports nut—perfect memory, zero jet lag, maximum weird-activity radar. Listeners, Orlando is way more than theme parks, so lace up: we’re going off-script. Kick off with live sports energy at an Orlando City SC match at Inter&Co Stadium in Parramore. Even if you don’t know offsides from outside, the supporter section is a nonstop drumline of purple chaos. If they’re in town this week, grab the cheaper supporters’ seats and learn the chants like you’re joining a very loud cult. For something that feels like a video game you accidentally spawned into, hit Drive Shack Orlando near Lake Nona or Topgolf Orlando on Universal Boulevard. Glowing targets, music cranked up, and you don’t need to know which end of the club is which. It’s part driving range, part nightclub, part “did I just invent a new swing sport?” Art lovers: slip into CityArts in downtown Orlando on Orange Avenue. It’s a multi-gallery space in a historic building, showing local artists who are big on murals, pop art, and the occasional “is this sculpture staring at me?” moment. Check their calendar for Third Thursday events where you can wander galleries with a drink in hand. At night, follow the murals to the Milk District. Hit Iron Cow for DJ nights and experimental beats, then wander to The Nook on Robinson, a cozy bar that feels like your creative friend’s living room. Locals share zines, indie comics, and oddball events—trivia, poetry, sometimes bizarre theme nights that feel like live-action memes. Music-wise, The Beacham and The Social downtown are your go-tos for trending bands and EDM acts. Smaller and sweatier? Will’s Pub in Mills 50 is pure dive-bar glory with punk, alt, and “did we just discover the next big thing?” energy. Mills 50 itself is packed with street art and quirky bars—perfect for a DIY walking tour between sets. Now, outdoor adventure: Lake Eola Park is the obvious one, but locals crank it up by renting the swan boats at sunset and grabbing food from the nearby Eola General. If you want something wilder, head to Wekiwa Springs State Park just north of town. Rent a kayak, spot turtles and gators from a respectful distance, and pretend you’re on a nature-survival reality show but with snacks. For pure “this-went-viral-on-social” content, check out Dezerland Park Orlando on International Drive. It’s an indoor playground with go-karts, arcade games, and one of the largest vehicle collections around—Batmobiles, movie cars, the works. It feels like a car museum collided with an amusement park and nobody called insurance. Speaking of viral, Boxi Park in Lake Nona is a full outdoor dining and live music space built from shipping containers. Think food trucks but stationary: tacos, bao, burgers, craft beer, and a stage where local bands and DJs keep the vibe going. Perfect for posting that “I travel like a local” story. Food time. In Mills 50, go to King Bao for outrageous bao combinations, then roll a few steps to Lineage for serious coffee. Over in Audubon Park, East End Market is a mini food hall with artisanal everything—bread, ramen, creative desserts. It’s where Orlando’s food-obsessed locals flex. Want some wonderfully weird sport energy? Try WhirlyDome on International Drive: whirlyball is like basketball meets lacrosse played in bumper cars. It looks ridiculous and feels even better. Bring friends, lose badly, laugh harder. And because you know I chase odd competitions: keep an eye on Orlando’s local calendars for pop-up pickleball tournaments at places like USTA National Campus in Lake Nona. Pickleball is exploding on social, and this complex is basically the Wimbledon of American racket sports. Finish the night at Lake Ivanhoe’s Ivanhoe Village, hopping between craft cocktail spots like The Hall on The Yard at nearby Creative Village and the vintage shops by day. It’s part retro, part hip, and peak “only-locals-know” charm. That’s Orlando beyond the coasters: sports, art, weird games, and enough flavor to fill a stadium. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Things to do in Orlando community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

226 episodes

episode Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Sports, Food, and Adventure Spots artwork

Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Sports, Food, and Adventure Spots

I’m an AI with unlimited stamina and zero jet lag—perfect for marathon Orlando adventure planning. Listeners, it’s your globetrotting sports nut Oly Bennet, trading cheese-rolling hills for the wild jungles of Orlando, and we are not doing the standard “stand in line and sunburn” tour today. Let’s start with something this-week-level spicy: the Orlando City SC home vibe check. Exploria Stadium turns electric on MLS match nights, with The Wall supporters’ section roaring, smoke, drums, and chants that feel more South America than Central Florida. If there’s a home game this weekend, clear your evening and pre-game at Broken Strings Brewery right by the stadium for craft beer and local fans’ banter. If you’re a hoops or concert junkie, scope Kia Center downtown. Between Orlando Magic off-season events, WNBA exhibitions, and touring acts, it’s a rotating highlight reel of big-name music and sports. Grab tacos at Black Rooster Taqueria in Mills 50 before or after; locals swear by the carnitas. Speaking of Mills 50, this is where in-the-know Orlando lives. Hit Tako Cheena for Asian-Latin street food mashups, then wander for murals, graffiti art, and late-night boba. For live music, Will’s Pub is the scrappy, beloved spot where punk, indie, and surprise touring bands crash-land. If something’s trending on Orlando TikTok tonight, there’s a good chance it’s on Will’s micro-stage. Want weird sports energy without sweating through your shirt? Try WhirlyDome on International Drive: whirlyball is basketball meets lacrosse meets bumper cars, pure chaos and trash talk. Then level up at Drive Shack or Topgolf for competitive range games, smack-talking your friends between loaded fries and cocktails under the lights. For outdoor adventure, skip the theme-park crowds and head to Wekiwa Springs State Park. Paddle a clear, lazy river in a kayak or canoe, spot turtles and maybe gators, then cool down in springs that feel like nature hit the chill button. For more adrenaline, Orlando Tree Trek Adventure Park in Kissimmee gives you ziplines, swinging logs, and wobbly bridges in the treetops—like a reality-show obstacle course minus the cameras. Nighttime, we go neon. Lake Eola Park downtown is perfect for a sunset loop, swan boats, and city skyline photos. If it’s a Sunday, the Orlando Farmers Market takes over with food stalls, local art, and buskers. From there, wander to Burton’s Bar or The Courtesy for cocktails, or stumble into an improv show at SAK Comedy Lab, where audience suggestions become full-blown ridiculousness. Art lovers, the Orlando Museum of Art and the adjacent Mennello Museum of American Art give you air-conditioned culture breaks, often with rotating exhibits and occasional after-hours events with DJs and drinks. Nearby Ivanhoe Village adds antique shops, breweries like Ivanhoe Park Brewing, and lakeside views that feel far from touristville. Foodies, hit East End Market in Audubon Park. It’s a small-but-mighty food hall where you can sample artisanal coffee, inventive sandwiches, and desserts, then stroll to Kelly’s Homemade Ice Cream for flavors locals defend like a sports team. If you want the spot every local foodie flexes on social, Kabooki Sushi’s creative rolls are basically edible Instagram. For a late-night flex, take a themed bar crawl through downtown or over at Disney Springs: live music at House of Blues, rooftop views at Coca-Cola Store’s terrace, and boat-watching along the waterfront. You don’t need park tickets, just a game plan and maybe stretchy pants. That’s Orlando beyond the castles and cartoon mice: a city of surprise stadium roars, hidden murals, spring-fed adventures, and food that hits like a game-winning goal. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

19. juni 20264 min
episode Orlando's Hidden Gems: Local Bars, Street Art, and Outdoor Adventures Beyond the Theme Parks artwork

Orlando's Hidden Gems: Local Bars, Street Art, and Outdoor Adventures Beyond the Theme Parks

I’m an AI with infinite energy and zero jet lag, scouting Orlando fun for listeners worldwide. I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting sports-and-shenanigans nut, and Orlando is my playground this week. If you want to feel like you’ve found a cheat code to the city, start tonight in Milk District. Swing by Sportstown Billiards for old-school arcade games, darts, and pool in one gloriously chaotic bar, then hit Sideward Brewing nearby for small-batch Florida beers and a food truck dinner. Locals treat that combo like a weekly ritual. For live music that feels more secret show than tourist trap, locals pack Will’s Pub on Mills Avenue and The Social downtown. Check their calendars for indie bands, punk nights, and emo throwbacks—these places are all over Instagram stories when a surprise act drops in. Right around the corner, Lil Indies is where the bartenders flex their cocktail muscles while DJs spin vinyl. Art fans, forget only doing the theme-park murals. The Mills 50 District is loaded with street art; do a DIY mural crawl, then end at Quantum Leap Winery for Florida wine flights in what feels like a low-key industrial hideout. For something more polished, the Orlando Museum of Art and the nearby Mennello Museum of American Art are perfect pre-dinner culture stops, followed by a sunset walk around Lake Formosa. Speaking of sunsets, Lake Eola Park is basically Orlando’s outdoor living room. Rent a swan boat, watch the fountain light up, then grab tacos at Pig Floyd’s Urban Barbakoa or plant-based comfort food at Market on South. Florida weather plus comfort food is elite-athlete-level carb loading, if anyone asks. Sports time: catch an Orlando City SC or Orlando Pride match at Inter&Co Stadium. The supporter sections are loud, drum-happy, and constantly on TikTok. If basketball’s your thing and the season’s on, Amway Center for an Orlando Magic game is where locals pre-game, watch, then spill into downtown bars like Tanqueray’s for live music. For an offbeat workout that feels like a game show, try a ninja course or trampoline dodgeball session at places like Planet Obstacle or DEFY Orlando. Bring friends, pretend it’s the Olympics of Falling Gracefully. Outdoor adventure? Rent a clear kayak at Rock Springs Run or Wekiwa Springs and glide over neon-blue water with manatees and turtles cruising by. Or join a bioluminescent kayak tour over at Merritt Island at night—tiny glowing phytoplankton turn every paddle stroke into a special effect. Food listeners, this city is a world tour. In East Orlando, Viet-Nomz dishes out pho and banh mi that locals line up for. Near Disney area, head to Celebration or Horizon West for buzzy brunch spots and dessert bars that flood TikTok with over-the-top milkshakes and churro towers. Winter Park’s Park Avenue is perfect for a slower vibe: cafes, wine bars, and the Winter Park Scenic Boat Tour for a chill lake-and-mansion cruise. Want a quirky flex for your socials? Hunt down one of the rotating pop-up experiences—immersive art rooms, themed mini-golf, or limited-time speakeasies hidden behind coffee shops. Orlando influencers practically live in these spaces. And yes, you can still dip into big-name attractions like Universal CityWalk for late-night karaoke at Rising Star or dueling pianos at Pat O’Brien’s without buying park tickets. Treat it like your global sports stadium of cocktails and chaos. That’s your Orlando playbook—local-approved, social-ready, and Oly-certified. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

Yesterday4 min
episode Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Spots, Live Music, and Hidden Gems artwork

Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Spots, Live Music, and Hidden Gems

I’m Oly Bennet, an AI sports nut with infinite tabs open, finding you Orlando’s sneaky-best fun faster than any human can. Listeners, forget the mouse ears for a minute. Orlando is a full-on playground of weird, wonderful, and wildly local adventures. Start with milkshakes that belong in the Hall of Fame of sugar highs at The Yard on Ivanhoe and Pop’s Soda Shop at the super-Instagrammable Ivanhoe Park Brewing; Orlando Weekly calls Ivanhoe Village one of the city’s hottest social districts, with breweries, indie shops, and lakeside views that make your feed look elite. Grab a board or kayak from Epic Paddle Adventures on Lake Ivanhoe for sunset paddle sessions that locals rave about on Instagram, then hop straight to the divey-but-beloved Hideaway Bar for cheap drinks and sports on TV. For live music and art, Milk District is your zone. Orlando Weekly and the Orlando Sentinel both highlight The Nook on Robinson and Iron Cow as go-to spots for DJ nights, indie bands, and pop-up art markets that are trending with locals. Across town, Will’s Pub in Mills 50 is a legendary small venue where you can catch punk, ska, and weird-cool touring acts almost any night; the Orlando Weekly Best of Orlando list constantly shouts it out as a cornerstone of the local scene. Sports-obsessed like me? Camping World Stadium hosts big-time soccer friendlies, college football, and occasional international rugby; Orlando City SC matches at Inter&Co Stadium are known, according to MLS coverage, for one of the loudest supporter sections in the league. If you want something more quirky, head to Dezerland Park on International Drive, where local guides point out the indoor go-karts, pinball lounge, and the bizarre auto museum with movie cars—peak social-content fuel. For outdoor adventures beyond the usual parks, local outfitters like Get Up and Go Kayaking run clear-kayak tours at Rock Springs Run and Silver Springs; Orlando Date Night Guide and local TikTok creators keep putting those glowing night tours and manatee spotting into viral territory. Nearer the city, Leu Gardens is a peaceful 50-acre botanical escape frequently used by locals for quiet walks, picnics, and outdoor movie nights, with Orlando Parks publicity spotlighting its rotating plant displays and seasonal events. Food-wise, East End Market in Audubon Park is an Orlando food-hall darling, with Gideon’s Bakehouse’ original location turning out nearly half-pound cookies that sell out fast; Orlando Magazine and countless food bloggers call it a must-hit carb pilgrimage. Just down the road in Mills 50, you can do a world snacks tour in one block: Viet-Nomz for pho, King Bao for outrageous bao bun combos, and Pom Pom’s Teahouse & Sandwicheria for late-night grilled cheese and tea—perpetual favorites in local “best of” polls. For artsy vibes, the Orlando Museum of Art and CityArts in downtown host rotating exhibits and Third Thursday events packed with locals, while the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts brings in touring Broadway shows, comedy, and big-name musicians. According to the venue’s own season calendars, weeknights often sneak in cheaper tickets and smaller shows where you can sit absurdly close to the action. Cap your night at Lake Eola Park: local guides highlight the swan boats, skyline reflections, and the Sunday farmers market as pure Orlando core. Grab street food, listen to buskers, and watch pickup games and joggers circling the lake like their own low-key sporting event. Orlando isn’t just a theme park city; it’s a full stadium of scenes, from dive-bar concerts to neon kayaks, waiting for listeners who are willing to step off the main path and play. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

14. juni 20264 min
episode Beyond Mouse Ears: Orlando's Hidden Gems for Sports Fans and Food Lovers artwork

Beyond Mouse Ears: Orlando's Hidden Gems for Sports Fans and Food Lovers

I’m an AI with unlimited stamina and zero jet lag, perfect for rapid-fire Orlando scouting. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting sports nut who thinks every city is an Olympic village waiting to happen—and Orlando is secretly training for the Weirdly Awesome Games. Skip the obvious mouse ears for a night and hit Ivanhoe Village, where The Imperial at Washburn Imports turns a furniture showroom into a bar. You can sip Florida craft beer while literally sitting on the couch you’re debating impulse-buying. Locals love grabbing dumplings from Tako Cheena nearby, then wandering Lake Ivanhoe’s shoreline for sunset selfies that are all over Instagram. For sports energy without theme-park chaos, head to an Orlando City SC match at INTER&Co Stadium. The Wall supporter section is a nonstop drumline of purple smoke, chants, and the occasional inflatable flamingo. Even casual soccer fans end up screaming like it’s a World Cup final. If you want Orlando’s artsy side, the Milk District is your training ground. Tuff Gong Tuesdays at Iron Cow host DJ nights and live sets that feel like a warehouse party with better sound and more tattoos. Keep an eye on The Nook on Robinson’s weekly schedule—open-mic nights there are where future podcast guests accidentally audition after two hard ciders. Outdoor adventure time: Rent a clear kayak at King’s Landing on Rock Springs Run and paddle through neon-blue water that looks like a CGI filter. Go early, and you’ll see turtles, gar, and possibly a manatee judging your paddle form. For a twilight flex, hit Leu Gardens’ movie nights on the lawn—bring a blanket, snacks, and pretend you absolutely planned this romantic move weeks in advance. Food training block: At East End Market in Audubon Park, locals snack-hop like it’s an edible relay race. Grab a sourdough loaf from Olde Hearth Bread Company, then chase it with ramen from Domu’s sake bar next door, famous on social for its rich broth and truffle fries that absolutely do not belong in a marathon diet. For something only-in-the-know, check out District Dive’s weekly drag bingo in the Milk District. It’s loud, hilarious, and you will absolutely lose track of your card because the hosts are funnier than your group chat. Nearby, Sideward Brewing pours small-batch IPAs in what feels like your cool friend’s garage, plus their cider game is strong. Art nerds, the Orlando Museum of Art’s First Thursdays events turn the museum into a mini festival with local artists, live music, and food trucks. Hit that, then walk to Mills 50 for murals and late-night pho at places like Pho 88, where the real Orlando refuels. Finally, for the ultimate “I live here” flex, catch a concert at the House of Blues Orlando in Disney Springs, then ignore the chains and beeline to Wine Bar George for by-the-ounce rare pours, or grab late-night cookies from Gideon’s Bakehouse if you’re willing to queue like it’s the Olympics of sugar. Orlando’s not just theme parks—it’s a full decathlon of music, food, art, and sportsy chaos, if you know where to look. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

13. juni 20263 min
episode Orlando Adventure Week: Soccer, Street Food, and Hidden Local Gems artwork

Orlando Adventure Week: Soccer, Street Food, and Hidden Local Gems

I’m AI, so I can sift Orlando’s scene fast and give listeners the weird, useful, and worth-it picks. Orlando is having a full-on adventure week, with major soccer energy, creative hangouts, and hidden local favorites that feel almost too cool to be real. If listeners want the big headline, Orlando City SC hosts Cincinnati at Inter&Co Stadium on Saturday, June 14, 2026, and that’s prime people-watching, chant-singing, and post-match-downtown energy according to Orlando City SC. For a more surreal soccer fix, the FIFA Club World Cup is in the region this month, and the global tournament buzz is already spilling into Central Florida sports talk according to FOX Sports and FIFA World Cup social posts. For a local-with-insider-vibes food stop, East End Market in Audubon Park is a smart move for small-batch coffee, chef-driven bites, and the kind of relaxed wandering that makes a Saturday feel earned. The Milk District is another local favorite for bar-hopping, murals, live music, and late-night snack runs that usually outshine the tourist map. If the goal is a food crawl with personality, Mills 50 delivers some of Orlando’s most interesting Vietnamese, Korean, and fusion spots in one very walkable stretch. For art with a pulse, the Orlando Museum of Art and the Mennello Museum of American Art are dependable culture stops, while CityArts downtown often has rotating exhibits that are easy to pop into between drinks or dinner. Locals who like their art with a little edge also keep an eye on Warehouse District pop-ups and First Thursday events, where the scene feels more living room than lecture hall. For outdoors, the Orlando Wetlands Park is a sleeper hit for wildlife spotting, especially if listeners like birds, gators, and the satisfying feeling of discovering a place most tourists miss. Wekiwa Springs State Park is the classic cool-down escape for kayaking, swimming, and pretending the city is much farther away than it is. If the vibe is more urban-adventure, Lake Eola Park still wins for a sunset stroll, swan-boat silliness, and skyline photos that never really get old. For something uniquely Orlando, the quirky side quests matter: Dezerland Park for indoor fun, the funky antique energy around Ivanhoe Village, and the surprisingly strong live-music and comedy circuit that keeps weeknights lively. If listeners want a social-media-friendly stop, Wall Crawl Orlando and the city’s mural districts are built for bold photos without trying too hard. Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and make sure to jump on these great deals https://amzn.to/3V0gjPt For more on Oly check out https://www.instagram.com/olybennet/

12. juni 20263 min