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Singapore News and Information

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Time IN Singapore Discover what's happening in the vibrant city-state with Time IN Singapore. Stay informed about the latest events, weather, air quality, and local insights. Whether you're a visitor exploring Marina Bay or a local navigating the city's bustling streets, this podcast provides daily updates to help you enjoy Singapore to the fullest. For more https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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jakson Things to Do in Singapore: Art, Food, and Air-Con Hops with Oly Bennet kansikuva

Things to Do in Singapore: Art, Food, and Air-Con Hops with Oly Bennet

Welcome listeners to Things to Do in Singapore with your globe-trotting sports nut Oly Bennet, beaming in on this fine day in the Lion City. Singapore is serving its classic combo today: warm, humid, and bright with a decent chance you’ll dart from air-con to air-con like it’s an Olympic relay. Streets are buzzing with office crowds, school holidays energy, and that ever-present scent of kopi and kaya toast. Let’s smash right into what’s happening around town today. According to the National Arts Council listings, the Singapore International Festival of Arts is packing in theatre, dance, and experimental performances, perfect for culture lovers who like their art with a side of “wait, what did I just watch?” Over at the Esplanade, their daily free performances are rolling on this evening, with local bands and cultural showcases turning the waterfront into a live music playground. The Singapore Sports Hub calendar shows community sports sessions and kids’ activities at the OCBC Arena and stadium precinct, so families can burn off energy before the sugar rush at dessert. For nightlife fans, Clarke Quay and Boat Quay bars are running midweek drink promos and DJ sets, turning the riverfront into a neon-lit people-watching arena. On the news and city update front, The Straits Times reports that a new wave of cafes and bistros has opened in Jalan Besar and Jewel Changi, including a couple of specialty coffee spots that look like they were designed by a latte-loving architect. LTA announcements highlight ongoing MRT improvement works on several lines, so listeners should check train service updates before heading out in the evening rush, especially around major interchanges like Dhoby Ghaut and Outram Park. There are also new cycling paths being rolled out in the East Coast and Punggol areas, making it easier to cruise around without feeling like you’re in a survival video game with traffic. Now for Oly’s playbook of must-do moves today. Start with a stroll through Tiong Bahru, where Art Deco shophouses meet hipster bakeries—grab kopi and a flaky pastry, then wander the back lanes for murals and quirky boutiques. Later, head to Gardens by the Bay to catch the Supertree Grove light show after sundown; it’s like stepping into a sci-fi stadium where the trees are the floodlights. If you’re craving something more low-key, hit East Coast Park for cycling or skating along the beach, then refuel at East Coast Lagoon Food Village with satay, BBQ stingray, and sugarcane juice. For a hidden-gem vibe, check out Kampong Glam’s side streets at Haji Lane and Bali Lane: indie shops by day, buzzy bars with live music by night. Here’s a local tip to level up your Singapore game: many hawker centres have multiple stalls selling the same dish, but the one with the longest queue is usually the champ. Singaporeans treat food lines like competitive sport, so if you see a patient, determined crowd, that’s your gold medal laksa or chicken rice right there. Also, always carry a light jacket for malls and cinemas—the air-con can feel like you’ve been drafted into a polar expedition. Before we wrap, a quick tease for tomorrow: event listings from VisitSingapore show more festival shows, weekend warm-up parties in the city, fresh exhibitions at the National Gallery, and family-friendly fun at attractions like the Zoo and Bird Paradise ramping up as the weekend approaches. Tune in next time as we scout the quirkiest happenings and coolest spots to turn your Singapore day into a highlight reel. 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/

18. kesä 2026 - 4 min
jakson Things to Do in Singapore: Sunday, June 14, 2026 - Markets, Gardens, and Tropical Heat kansikuva

Things to Do in Singapore: Sunday, June 14, 2026 - Markets, Gardens, and Tropical Heat

Good morning, listeners, and welcome to Things to do in Singapore. Today is Sunday, June 14, 2026, and Singapore is serving up its usual mix of polished city buzz and tropical heat, with a likely warm, humid day that’s perfect for getting out early, ducking into shaded spots, and keeping an eye out for pop-up excitement across the island. Here’s the vibe check: Singapore usually wakes up on Sundays with a calmer pace than the weekday sprint, but the city still hums with food hunts, family outings, and late-afternoon plans that roll neatly into nightlife. With no live event feed available in my search results right now, I can’t verify today’s exact concerts, festivals, or special happenings, but Sunday is typically the day for community markets, museum visits, and waterfront strolls that feel like the city’s version of a victory lap. For a classic Singapore day, start at Gardens by the Bay for skyline views and a cooling escape among the Supertrees. Then swing by Chinatown or Little India for a full sensory sprint of temples, snacks, and street life. If you want something more offbeat, take the ferry to Pulau Ubin for a rustic, old-Singapore adventure that feels miles away from the glass-and-steel main stage. For families, the Singapore Zoo and River Wonders remain strong crowd-pleasers, while Marina Bay is ideal if you want that postcard-perfect city glow as the day turns gold. On the food front, Singapore’s always in the opening-rounds of culinary drama, and hawker centers remain the heavyweight champion. Lau Pa Sat, Maxwell Food Centre, and Tekka Centre are still among the best places to sample local favorites without overthinking the playbook. For nightlife, Clarke Quay usually anchors the after-dark action, with riverside bars and music spots that keep the energy up well past sunset. As for local news and announcements, I don’t have verified real-time updates on new restaurant openings or transit changes from today’s search results, so it’s worth checking the MRT, bus, and venue notices before heading out. That said, Singapore is famous for keeping public transport clean, efficient, and game-ready, so getting around is usually straightforward once you’ve mapped your first stop. A local tip: carry an umbrella even when the sky looks innocent. In Singapore, sunshine can turn into a sudden tropical downpour faster than a sprint finish, and locals treat weather prep like a competitive sport. And if you’re looking for tomorrow’s tease, keep an eye out for another round of city eats, neighborhood discoveries, and surprise happenings that can turn an ordinary Monday into a mini championship day. 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. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Things to Do in Singapore: Beat the Heat and Catch the Weekend Buzz kansikuva

Things to Do in Singapore: Beat the Heat and Catch the Weekend Buzz

Welcome listeners to Things to Do in Singapore with your globetrotting sports nut Oly Bennet, reporting in from the Little Red Dot where the humidity is high, the air-con is heroic, and the city is buzzing for the weekend on Saturday, June 13, 2026. Quick snapshot of the vibe: Singapore’s warm and a little sticky, perfect for dashing between malls, museums, and alfresco bars. According to the Meteorological Service Singapore, you can expect a hot day with a chance of afternoon showers, so keep that umbrella handy and your flip-flops ready to sprint. Here are some standout happenings today across the city. Over at the Esplanade, the ongoing Flipside festival is bringing quirky performances, street acts, and family-friendly shows to the waterfront, ideal if you like your culture with a side of laughter. The Singapore International Festival of Arts continues with contemporary theatre and visual installations around the Civic District, a treat for arts lovers. Sports fans can swing by the Singapore Sports Hub, where community fitness events and public court bookings make it easy to squeeze in a game or two. For families, the Science Centre Singapore is running weekend STEM workshops and interactive exhibits that keep kids entertained and sneakily educated. And when the sun goes down, Clarke Quay and Ann Siang Hill come alive with DJ sets, live bands, and late-night bites to fuel your dance-floor ambitions. On the news and city update front, local outlets report that new eateries are popping up in Tanjong Pagar and Joo Chiat, with a wave of modern kopitiams and specialty coffee bars giving traditional flavors a playful twist. There are also ongoing MRT improvements with occasional off-peak adjustments on some lines, so it’s worth checking the latest from SBS Transit or SMRT before you head out. The city continues to push cashless payments hard, so having your e-wallet or contactless card ready will make you feel like a true local pro. Now for your must-do list today. Start with a classic: take an early stroll through Gardens by the Bay to beat the heat, then duck into the Cloud Forest for that cool, misty mountain vibe without leaving the tropics. Hit a hawker centre like Maxwell Food Centre or Old Airport Road for chicken rice, char kway teow, and sugarcane juice—cheap, legendary, and basically a competitive sport in choosing the best stall. In the afternoon, explore the colorful shophouses of Katong and Joo Chiat, then reward yourself with Peranakan kueh and an iced coffee. If you want something a bit offbeat, try night cycling along East Coast Park or the Marina Bay loop—the skyline views feel like playing in a neon-lit stadium. Local tip time: Singapore may be small, but each neighborhood is its own world. Use the MRT as your “team bus”—it’s fast, air-conditioned, and often quicker than taxis during busy periods. And remember, if you’re at a hawker centre, watching where the longest queue forms is like checking the league table: the longest line usually marks the champion stall. Before we wrap, keep an eye out for tomorrow’s action: weekend farmers’ and craft markets, more arts festival performances, and possible pop-up events around Marina Bay and Orchard Road. I’ll be back to scout the best of the bunch so you don’t miss a thing. 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. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Things to Do in Singapore: Gardens, Street Art, Hawker Feasts and Tropical Thrills with Oly Bennett kansikuva

Things to Do in Singapore: Gardens, Street Art, Hawker Feasts and Tropical Thrills with Oly Bennett

Welcome listeners to Things to Do in Singapore with your globetrotting sports nut, Oly Bennett! Singapore today is buzzing: it’s hot, humid, and gloriously tropical, with the usual “is it about to rain or not?” suspense that makes every walk outside feel like extra time in a cup final. The vibe in the city is peak weekend-mode. The Singapore Tourism Board highlights how June is stacked with arts, food, and family action, and today is no exception. Over at Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, their ongoing lineup of free and ticketed performances means you can catch live music or dance without blowing your budget. For culture lovers, the National Gallery Singapore is featuring special exhibitions that mix Southeast Asian history with bold contemporary art, turning your museum stroll into a full-on mental workout. For families, Science Centre Singapore is running hands-on STEM activities and interactive exhibits that feel like a real‑life game show for curious kids. And if you’re a night owl, Clarke Quay and Boat Quay are in full swing this evening with live bands, riverfront bars, and a party atmosphere that feels like a stadium crowd after a last‑minute winner. On the news and city updates front, local media in Singapore report that new F&B concepts keep popping up around Tanjong Pagar, Joo Chiat, and the Orchard area, including trendy fusion spots and specialty coffee bars—perfect for pre‑ or post‑adventure fuel. According to updates from SBS Transit and SMRT, rail services are running normally today, though listeners should always keep an eye on the official apps and station boards for any late‑night maintenance or minor delays. Around the Marina Bay area, ongoing events and pop‑ups may mean occasional road closures, so public transport is usually your best bet. Now, Oly’s must‑do lineup for today. First, hit Gardens by the Bay early or closer to sunset: the Supertree Grove light show turns the night sky into a sci‑fi sports arena, and it’s one of the most iconic experiences in Singapore. Then make your way to Kampong Gelam and Haji Lane for street art, indie shops, and cafés—think of it as Singapore’s creative training ground, where fashion, coffee, and murals all compete for your attention. If you’re craving thrills, Sentosa offers beaches, cable cars, and attractions like Skyline Luge, which feels like a gravity-fueled race down a tropical track. And for food, hawker centres like Maxwell, Lau Pa Sat, or Old Airport Road are your Olympic village of flavors: chicken rice, satay, laksa, and more, all under one roof. Here’s a local tip: in many malls and MRT stations, you’ll find underground walkways linking buildings. In the midday heat, these air‑conditioned tunnels are like secret passages known only to seasoned locals—use them to stay cool and move fast. And a fun fact for my sports‑obsessed listeners: Singapore hosts quirky events like dragon boat races and vertical marathons up skyscrapers, proving this city loves to turn its architecture and waterways into giant playing fields. Stay tuned, because tomorrow Singapore has more action lined up, from weekend markets and brunch spots to evening concerts and waterfront events that will keep your schedule packed. I’ll be back to guide you through the next round 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/

12. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Things to Do in Singapore: Hawkers, Humidity, and Mahjong Aunties kansikuva

Things to Do in Singapore: Hawkers, Humidity, and Mahjong Aunties

Welcome, listeners, to Things to Do in Singapore with your globe-trotting sports nut Oly Bennet, broadcasting straight from the land of hawker centers, humidity, and secretly super-competitive aunties at the mahjong table. It’s a hot and humid day in the Lion City as usual, with steamy temps hovering around the low 30s and that classic “instant sweat” vibe the Singapore weather service loves to warn about. The air’s a little hazy but still bright, and Marina Bay is already buzzing with office warriors, joggers, and tourists battling the sun with oversized umbrellas. According to Visit Singapore, the city’s events calendar is stacked right now. Over at the Esplanade, the ongoing arts programs are bringing live music and dance to the waterfront this evening, perfect if you like your culture with a side of bay breeze. Singapore Sports Hub reports community sports activities and casual games happening around Kallang, so if you’ve ever wanted to shoot hoops or kick a ball under a stadium that’s fancier than your last vacation, tonight’s your night. The Singapore Tourism Board highlights family-friendly fun at attractions like Singapore Zoo and River Wonders, which are running seasonal wildlife experiences and keeper talks that make the kids go “whoa” and the parents go “worth the ticket.” For nightlife fans, local venue listings point to live DJ sets and themed nights around Clarke Quay and Boat Quay, where the riverfront comes alive after dark with neon lights, cocktails, and people pretending they don’t have work tomorrow. And if you’re into festivals and food, various listings show pop-up dining events and craft markets sprinkled around town, especially in areas like Kampong Gelam and Gillman Barracks, mixing art, street food, and very Instagrammable corners. On the local news front, the Land Transport Authority has been rolling out incremental MRT upgrades and testing new systems on several lines, so listeners should keep an eye on station notices and apps for minor timing changes or maintenance closures in the evenings. Local media also report a steady stream of new restaurant and café openings, especially in Joo Chiat, Tiong Bahru, and the Orchard area, with trendy coffee spots sharing space with old-school kopitiams. Singapore food blogs are already buzzing about new fusion joints mixing Peranakan flavors with modern twists, so bring your appetite. If you’re planning your day, here are some must-dos. Hit a hawker centre like Lau Pa Sat, Maxwell, or Old Airport Road for breakfast or lunch and go full Olympic mode on chicken rice, laksa, and satay. Wander through Little India and Kampong Gelam in the afternoon for colorful shophouses, street art, and fabric shops you never knew you needed. As the heat eases, head to Gardens by the Bay; the Supertree Grove light show in the evening is basically sci-fi meets tropical holiday. If you want a quieter local gem, stroll the Rail Corridor, an old railway line turned green trail that makes you forget you’re in a dense city until you spot the next condo. Here’s a fun local tip: Singaporeans are world-class queue champions. If you see a line at a hawker stall, that’s your Michelin guide right there. Join the queue, prepare to order fast, and always “chope” your seat by leaving a tissue packet on the table like a pro—yes, that is a real system. Stay tuned, because tomorrow’s lineup in Singapore brings more live performances, weekend markets gearing up, and sporting events that might just inspire you to lace up your running shoes or at least cheer from the shade. We’ll be back to help you plan it all. 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/

11. kesä 2026 - 4 min
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