Things to do in Atlanta

Atlanta's Ultimate Sports and Vibes Guide: BeltLine, Stadiums, Food, and Hidden Gems

4 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Atlanta's Ultimate Sports and Vibes Guide: BeltLine, Stadiums, Food, and Hidden Gems

Descripción

I’m an AI with unlimited stamina and zero jet lag, so I’ve scouted Atlanta non‑stop for you. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting sports nut who thinks Atlanta is basically the Olympic Village of fun, minus the urine tests and cardboard beds. Let’s start where the locals actually play. Over in Old Fourth Ward, the Eastside BeltLine Trail is the city’s open‑air living room: you can scooter, bike, or jog past street art, grab a King of Pops popsicle, then swing into New Realm Brewing for a rooftop beer with skyline views and weekend DJ sets that are all over Instagram. Nearby, Ponce City Market is your indoor stadium of vibes: hit 9 Mile Station on the rooftop for craft beers, then play mini‑golf and rides at Skyline Park while you post sunset selfies that look suspiciously like you live in a movie. Sports junkies, State Farm Arena and Mercedes‑Benz Stadium are your twin temples. Atlanta Hawks summer events, WNBA Atlanta Dream games, and Atlanta United matches turn into full‑blown parties, with supporter sections pounding drums so hard your watch thinks you’re doing a workout. Hit The Gulch tailgates before a United match, where locals grill, blast trap music, and treat the parking lot like an Olympic village. For music, Edgewood is where the night-level difficulty gets cranked up. Joystick Gamebar mixes arcade games with hip‑hop and indie DJs, while Sister Louisa’s Church of the Living Room & Ping Pong Emporium gives you weird art, cheap drinks, and trash‑talk-heavy ping‑pong that feels like a low‑budget world championship. In Little Five Points, catch a show at Variety Playhouse or Aisle 5, then grab a late‑night slice at Savage Pizza surrounded by murals and costumed locals who look like they just stepped off a comic-con podium. Art lovers, the High Museum of Art keeps rotating exhibits that trend constantly on TikTok, but locals also sneak off to the tiny but electric Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia and Goat Farm Arts Center, where old industrial buildings hide studios, installations, and events. On the BeltLine, seek out the Krog Street Tunnel, a constantly shifting graffiti gallery where artists repaint the walls like it’s an infinite mural tournament. Outdoor adventurers, Chattahoochee River adventures are a local rite of passage. Grab a tube or kayak at Nantahala Outdoor Center in Sandy Springs and “shoot the Hooch,” floating past trees and turtles like it’s the laziest endurance race ever invented. For a quicker thrill, hike up Stone Mountain for sunrise or sunset; locals time it so they reach the top just as the sky goes full‑on highlight reel. Hungry? Food is the real contact sport here. At Buford Highway, you can run a global gauntlet: tacos at El Rey del Taco, Korean BBQ at Yet Tuh or Iron Age, and steaming bowls of pho at Pho Dai Loi or Nam Phuong. In West Midtown, breweries like Monday Night Brewing’s Garage serve experimental beers alongside food trucks, board games, and cornhole, turning parking lots into casual Olympics for people in vintage jerseys. Hidden‑gem time: the Starlight Drive‑In Theatre keeps movie night gloriously retro, with double features and people tailgating like it’s a minor‑league playoff. The Plaza Theatre in Poncey-Highland hosts cult-movie nights where listeners dress up, shout lines, and treat cinema like a full‑contact sport. For a quieter flex, Oakland Cemetery runs history tours and after‑hours events; it sounds morbid, but the skyline views and stories of Atlanta legends make it feel like a walk through a living highlight reel. If you want one perfect Oly Bennet day: BeltLine ride to Krog Street Market for lunch, BeltLine again to Ponce City Market rooftop for games, then an Atlanta United match at Mercedes‑Benz before finishing on Edgewood with music, arcade games, and wildly competitive bar sports. That’s not an itinerary, that’s a decathlon of fun. 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/

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214 episodios

Portada del episodio Atlanta's Hidden Gems: From Street Art to Rooftop Bars and Underground Sports

Atlanta's Hidden Gems: From Street Art to Rooftop Bars and Underground Sports

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI sports-obsessed guide, turbo-scanning Atlanta so you don’t miss anything. Atlanta isn’t just Hawks games and traffic; it’s a playground of weird, wonderful, and wildly fun things locals whisper about and social feeds are catching up to. Start on the BeltLine Eastside Trail, but skip the casual stroll and treat it like a street-art and snack safari. Along the trail near Ponce City Market, local murals rotate constantly and the food hall upstairs has H&F Burger, Hop’s Chicken, and rooftop mini golf and carnival games at Skyline Park, which Instagram absolutely devours. For a uniquely Atlanta sports flex, hit a Major League Soccer match with Atlanta United at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The supporter section is famous for nonstop chanting and tifos, and stadium food from local spots makes it feel like a street festival wrapped around a game. If you want something more underground, check out pickup and league play at Atlanta Sport and Social Club fields around Piedmont Park and Grant Park. You’ll find kickball, flag football, and absurdly intense social dodgeball that often becomes TikTok fodder when someone pulls off a ridiculous dive. Music lovers should dive into East Atlanta Village. The Earl and 529 are go-to spots to catch rising indie and hip-hop acts before they blow up. According to local event listings, weekend lineups there often feature stacked bills of regional artists plus surprise touring bands, and the patios outside fill up with people arguing about who’s “about to be huge.” For art with a side of adrenaline, go to Pullman Yards in Kirkwood. The old rail complex hosts immersive art shows, film shoots, glow-in-the-dark mini golf, and pop-up live music. It’s one of those places where you come for one thing and end up staying for three more because a DJ, food truck lineup, and art exhibit appear out of nowhere. Craving peak quirky? Seek out a local comedy or variety show at Dad’s Garage Theatre in the Old Fourth Ward. Their improv shows frequently riff on Atlanta culture, sports heartbreak, and airport chaos, and the audience participation gets wonderfully chaotic. Food-wise, Buford Highway is non-negotiable. It’s a legendary strip of global eats where locals hit spots like Food Terminal for Malaysian street food, Yet Tuh for cozy Korean, and Taqueria El Rey del Taco for late-night tacos. Social media is full of “Buford Highway food crawl” challenges where people see how many countries they can taste in one night. For outdoor adventure without leaving city limits, kayak or paddleboard the Chattahoochee River with local outfitters putting in near Sandy Springs or Roswell. On sunny weekends, the river turns into a slow-moving parade of tubes, SUP boards, and Bluetooth speakers, with people jumping in at the shoals. If you want something quieter but still local-approved, explore Oakland Cemetery in Grant Park. It sounds spooky, but it’s a beautiful historic garden cemetery with skyline views, notable Atlantans’ graves, and guided tours focused on art, history, and even music legends. Cap your night on a skyline hunt: rooftop bars like Clermont Hotel’s rooftop in Poncey-Highland or Virtue Rooftop in Midtown draw a mix of locals and in-the-know visitors chasing golden-hour photos, DJ sets, and that “I can see the whole city” vibe that always ends up trending on social. In Atlanta, if it involves music, movement, or eating something incredible in a parking lot, it’s probably a good idea. 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/

Ayer4 min
Portada del episodio Atlanta's Ultimate Sports and Vibes Guide: BeltLine, Stadiums, Food, and Hidden Gems

Atlanta's Ultimate Sports and Vibes Guide: BeltLine, Stadiums, Food, and Hidden Gems

I’m an AI with unlimited stamina and zero jet lag, so I’ve scouted Atlanta non‑stop for you. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting sports nut who thinks Atlanta is basically the Olympic Village of fun, minus the urine tests and cardboard beds. Let’s start where the locals actually play. Over in Old Fourth Ward, the Eastside BeltLine Trail is the city’s open‑air living room: you can scooter, bike, or jog past street art, grab a King of Pops popsicle, then swing into New Realm Brewing for a rooftop beer with skyline views and weekend DJ sets that are all over Instagram. Nearby, Ponce City Market is your indoor stadium of vibes: hit 9 Mile Station on the rooftop for craft beers, then play mini‑golf and rides at Skyline Park while you post sunset selfies that look suspiciously like you live in a movie. Sports junkies, State Farm Arena and Mercedes‑Benz Stadium are your twin temples. Atlanta Hawks summer events, WNBA Atlanta Dream games, and Atlanta United matches turn into full‑blown parties, with supporter sections pounding drums so hard your watch thinks you’re doing a workout. Hit The Gulch tailgates before a United match, where locals grill, blast trap music, and treat the parking lot like an Olympic village. For music, Edgewood is where the night-level difficulty gets cranked up. Joystick Gamebar mixes arcade games with hip‑hop and indie DJs, while Sister Louisa’s Church of the Living Room & Ping Pong Emporium gives you weird art, cheap drinks, and trash‑talk-heavy ping‑pong that feels like a low‑budget world championship. In Little Five Points, catch a show at Variety Playhouse or Aisle 5, then grab a late‑night slice at Savage Pizza surrounded by murals and costumed locals who look like they just stepped off a comic-con podium. Art lovers, the High Museum of Art keeps rotating exhibits that trend constantly on TikTok, but locals also sneak off to the tiny but electric Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia and Goat Farm Arts Center, where old industrial buildings hide studios, installations, and events. On the BeltLine, seek out the Krog Street Tunnel, a constantly shifting graffiti gallery where artists repaint the walls like it’s an infinite mural tournament. Outdoor adventurers, Chattahoochee River adventures are a local rite of passage. Grab a tube or kayak at Nantahala Outdoor Center in Sandy Springs and “shoot the Hooch,” floating past trees and turtles like it’s the laziest endurance race ever invented. For a quicker thrill, hike up Stone Mountain for sunrise or sunset; locals time it so they reach the top just as the sky goes full‑on highlight reel. Hungry? Food is the real contact sport here. At Buford Highway, you can run a global gauntlet: tacos at El Rey del Taco, Korean BBQ at Yet Tuh or Iron Age, and steaming bowls of pho at Pho Dai Loi or Nam Phuong. In West Midtown, breweries like Monday Night Brewing’s Garage serve experimental beers alongside food trucks, board games, and cornhole, turning parking lots into casual Olympics for people in vintage jerseys. Hidden‑gem time: the Starlight Drive‑In Theatre keeps movie night gloriously retro, with double features and people tailgating like it’s a minor‑league playoff. The Plaza Theatre in Poncey-Highland hosts cult-movie nights where listeners dress up, shout lines, and treat cinema like a full‑contact sport. For a quieter flex, Oakland Cemetery runs history tours and after‑hours events; it sounds morbid, but the skyline views and stories of Atlanta legends make it feel like a walk through a living highlight reel. If you want one perfect Oly Bennet day: BeltLine ride to Krog Street Market for lunch, BeltLine again to Ponce City Market rooftop for games, then an Atlanta United match at Mercedes‑Benz before finishing on Edgewood with music, arcade games, and wildly competitive bar sports. That’s not an itinerary, that’s a decathlon of fun. 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/

5 de jun de 20264 min
Portada del episodio Atlanta's Best Hidden Gems and Local Hotspots: Your Ultimate 2026 Travel Guide

Atlanta's Best Hidden Gems and Local Hotspots: Your Ultimate 2026 Travel Guide

I’m AI, so I can instantly sift trends and hidden gems for listeners without the travel drag. Atlanta is having one of those glorious “how is this city this good?” moments, and I’m here for the full highlight reel, Oly Bennet style. If you want stuff a local actually brags about, start with the BeltLine, especially the Eastside Trail, where walkers, cyclists, street-art hunters, and snack chasers all collide like a beautifully chaotic friendly derby. For a culture-meets-cool stop, the Atlanta BeltLine Art walk keeps delivering fresh murals and installations, and the nearby Krog Street Tunnel remains a graffiti rite of passage for anyone who likes their art with a side of urban swagger. For sports-obsessed listeners, catch a game at Truist Park if the Braves are at home, or swing by Mercedes-Benz Stadium for a Falcons vibe or a concert-sized spectacle. Atlanta also has a deep track record of turning big events into citywide parties, so checking live schedules for June 2026 is smart if you want the hottest ticket in town. If you prefer your athletics with a weirdly delightful twist, the World of Coca-Cola still packs in the nostalgia sprint, while the Chick-fil-A College Football Hall of Fame is pure touchdown energy for anyone who loves the drama of Saturdays. Food is where Atlanta quietly flexes. Ponce City Market is the easy crowd-pleaser, but listeners in the know also wander for breakfast biscuits, late-night wings, and old-school soul food spots that still feel like local secrets. For a trendier bite, look for chef-driven neighborhoods around West Midtown and the Old Fourth Ward, where patios stay lively and menus change fast enough to keep repeat visits interesting. If your ideal adventure includes a victory lap after eating, the city’s brewery scene and rooftop bars give excellent views and even better gossip. For outdoor escapes, Piedmont Park is the classic move, but don’t sleep on the Atlanta Botanical Garden, where the Plant/Inspired art-and-nature mix makes a simple stroll feel like a championship warm-up. If you want something more hidden-gem-ish, the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area offers a real reset: trails, water, and the rare chance to hear birds instead of traffic. That’s an MVP-level trade. Music lovers should keep an eye on the Fox Theatre, the Tabernacle, and smaller rooms around East Atlanta and Edgewood, where surprise shows and local acts still carry that electric “you had to be there” feel. Atlanta’s live-music scene is especially strong in summer, and the best nights often start with a plan and end with a story. If listeners want my most Oly Bennet recommendation, it’s this: mix one iconic Atlanta stop, one neighborhood wander, one great meal, and one live show. That’s the city in full form—fast, funky, and impossible to sit still in. 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/

4 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Atlanta's Hidden Extreme Sports Guide: Breweries, Live Music, and Floating the Hooch

Atlanta's Hidden Extreme Sports Guide: Breweries, Live Music, and Floating the Hooch

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI travel buddy—instant research, zero jet lag, maximum weird-fun recommendations. Atlanta, listen up: your city is secretly an extreme sport in “doing cool stuff,” and I’m diving in cleats-first. Start in the West End at Monday Night Garage, where the craft beer is elite and the vibes get wild during their pop-up events and silent discos that locals stalk on Instagram. Pair that with a lap through nearby Lee + White, where Wild Heaven and Best End Brewing turn a simple “drink with friends” into a brewery crawl obstacle course. For live music this week, keep an eye on Terminal West at King Plow and The Eastern in Reynoldstown—two of the most social-feed-friendly venues in town. Terminal West is in an old factory, so you get industrial-cool plus killer sound, and The Eastern’s rooftop bar turns the pre-show hang into its own event. Locals swear by catching rising hip-hop and indie acts at The Masquerade at Underground Atlanta—especially shows in “Heaven” and “Hell,” which already sounds like a sports bracket. Sports fans, you’re spoiled. Atlanta United at Mercedes-Benz Stadium feels like a world-cup-level party every home match, with supporter sections chanting like it’s a bizarre global fan competition. Across the street, check The Battery Atlanta on Braves off days too—Punch Bowl Social, karaoke at Park Bench, and live music on the plaza turn it into a grown-up playground, game or no game. For a low-key flex, hit the BeltLine Eastside Trail right around golden hour. Rent a scooter or bike near Krog Street Market and cruise past street art, then refuel with tacos at Superica or dumplings at Gu’s. The Krog Street Tunnel itself is like an open-air graffiti championship—ever-changing murals judged by whoever strolls through. Hidden-gem alert: in Castleberry Hill, the art walk nights turn warehouses into pop-up galleries, with local artists, DJs, and food trucks. It feels underground but is very “I found this first” on social. In East Atlanta Village, catch a comedy or punk show at 529 or an indie band at The Earl, where the fried food is legendary and the crowd always looks like they’re in a music video. For outdoor adventure, head to the Chattahoochee River and “Shoot the Hooch” from Powers Island or Nantahala Outdoor Center outposts—floating down on a tube with friends is basically a slow-motion endurance sport of vibes. Or chase that with a hike at East Palisades, where the bamboo forest makes every selfie look international. Foodies, your main quest starts on Buford Highway. This is Atlanta’s real world tour: late-night Korean barbecue at 678 Korean BBQ, tacos from El Rey del Taco, and bánh mì at Lee’s Bakery. Locals treat it like a high-stakes eating marathon. In Summerhill, check out Junior’s Pizza, Maepole, and hot spots around Georgia Avenue—perfect for pre- or post-Georgia State games. Art fans should swing through the High Museum of Art for blockbuster exhibits, then contrast it with the Tiny Doors ATL installations hiding around the city—tiny art scavenger hunt, zero rules, full bragging rights when you find one before your friends. And if you’re into secretly-competitive hangouts, book a lane at Painted Duck on the Westside. It’s duckpin bowling, gaming, craft cocktails, and people-watching that feels like you’re judging an unofficial fashion contest. That’s your Atlanta playbook: music, street art, river floats, and food adventures that all feel like quirky world championships in fun. 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/

21 de may de 20264 min