Indianapolis Local Pulse

Indianapolis Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Spring Showers, and Community Care

3 min · 14 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Indianapolis Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Spring Showers, and Community Care

Descripción

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Sunday, June fourteenth. We wake up today with some leftover rain in the area, as early morning showers and a few thunderstorms move across Marion County. Meteorologists on 13News and the National Weather Service say we see scattered storms through late morning, then skies gradually clear and we top out in the mid 70s. That means our afternoon plans around Monument Circle, Broad Ripple, and Garfield Park look mostly good, but we keep an eye out for any slick spots on I 65 and I 70 from the morning rain. Downtown, our big story this weekend is Indy Pride. Local coverage from WTHR and the Indianapolis Star reports that the Indy Pride Parade continues along Mass Avenue, bringing thousands into the Cultural Trail area, and the festival events keep going today at Military Park. We can expect some traffic delays and tighter parking around Mass Ave, College Avenue, and West Street, so it is a good day to plan a few extra minutes if we are heading that way. From city hall, council members continue to focus on public safety and neighborhood investment, with ongoing debates over funding for road repairs and sidewalk improvements near East Washington Street and on the near north side. These decisions affect how quickly potholes get filled and how safe our kids are walking to schools in areas like Warren and Wayne townships. On the jobs front, local recruiters report that warehouse, logistics, and health care roles remain strong on the southwest side near the airport, with hourly pay for many entry level roles now in the mid to upper teens. Real estate agents say Marion County listings are still moving quickly, with the typical home now going for the mid two hundreds and many starter homes near Fountain Square and Irvington drawing multiple offers. In business news, we see steady buzz around the riverfront near Back 9 Golf and Entertainment on Drover Street, where today’s Sunday Funday event runs late afternoon with live music, games, and a view of the downtown skyline. Up on Mass Ave, several restaurants are adding seasonal patios, giving us more options for outdoor brunch after the rain moves out. For families, Indy With Kids highlights Cars and Coffee at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum this morning, a fun stop before naps or lunch, and there are kid friendly movie showings at several AMC theaters around the metro. On the arts side, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra marks a season finale downtown at Hilbert Circle Theatre, and there are additional concerts listed this evening at Ruoff Music Center in Noblesville, giving music fans options both in the city and just up I 69. In sports, the Fever continue their homestand at Gainbridge Fieldhouse as they push toward the middle of the WNBA standings, and high school athletes around the region are wrapping up summer league games, with several Marion County baseball and softball teams celebrating recent tournament wins. Police report a steady but manageable weekend downtown, with IMPD emphasizing extra patrols around Mass Ave, the Canal Walk, and Broad Ripple Village during the Pride celebrations and late night bar hours. Officers urge us to use well lit parking areas, lock our cars, and report suspicious activity, but so far no major incidents tied directly to the large events. We close with a feel good moment on the near east side, where neighbors along East Tenth Street and Rural Street are organizing a volunteer cleanup today, picking up trash, planting flowers, and helping elderly residents with yard work. They remind us that even a few hours together can change how our blocks feel and how proud we are of our city. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local update. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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episode Indianapolis Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Spring Showers, and Community Care artwork

Indianapolis Local Pulse: Pride Weekend, Spring Showers, and Community Care

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Sunday, June fourteenth. We wake up today with some leftover rain in the area, as early morning showers and a few thunderstorms move across Marion County. Meteorologists on 13News and the National Weather Service say we see scattered storms through late morning, then skies gradually clear and we top out in the mid 70s. That means our afternoon plans around Monument Circle, Broad Ripple, and Garfield Park look mostly good, but we keep an eye out for any slick spots on I 65 and I 70 from the morning rain. Downtown, our big story this weekend is Indy Pride. Local coverage from WTHR and the Indianapolis Star reports that the Indy Pride Parade continues along Mass Avenue, bringing thousands into the Cultural Trail area, and the festival events keep going today at Military Park. We can expect some traffic delays and tighter parking around Mass Ave, College Avenue, and West Street, so it is a good day to plan a few extra minutes if we are heading that way. From city hall, council members continue to focus on public safety and neighborhood investment, with ongoing debates over funding for road repairs and sidewalk improvements near East Washington Street and on the near north side. These decisions affect how quickly potholes get filled and how safe our kids are walking to schools in areas like Warren and Wayne townships. On the jobs front, local recruiters report that warehouse, logistics, and health care roles remain strong on the southwest side near the airport, with hourly pay for many entry level roles now in the mid to upper teens. Real estate agents say Marion County listings are still moving quickly, with the typical home now going for the mid two hundreds and many starter homes near Fountain Square and Irvington drawing multiple offers. In business news, we see steady buzz around the riverfront near Back 9 Golf and Entertainment on Drover Street, where today’s Sunday Funday event runs late afternoon with live music, games, and a view of the downtown skyline. Up on Mass Ave, several restaurants are adding seasonal patios, giving us more options for outdoor brunch after the rain moves out. For families, Indy With Kids highlights Cars and Coffee at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum this morning, a fun stop before naps or lunch, and there are kid friendly movie showings at several AMC theaters around the metro. On the arts side, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra marks a season finale downtown at Hilbert Circle Theatre, and there are additional concerts listed this evening at Ruoff Music Center in Noblesville, giving music fans options both in the city and just up I 69. In sports, the Fever continue their homestand at Gainbridge Fieldhouse as they push toward the middle of the WNBA standings, and high school athletes around the region are wrapping up summer league games, with several Marion County baseball and softball teams celebrating recent tournament wins. Police report a steady but manageable weekend downtown, with IMPD emphasizing extra patrols around Mass Ave, the Canal Walk, and Broad Ripple Village during the Pride celebrations and late night bar hours. Officers urge us to use well lit parking areas, lock our cars, and report suspicious activity, but so far no major incidents tied directly to the large events. We close with a feel good moment on the near east side, where neighbors along East Tenth Street and Rural Street are organizing a volunteer cleanup today, picking up trash, planting flowers, and helping elderly residents with yard work. They remind us that even a few hours together can change how our blocks feel and how proud we are of our city. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local update. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

14 de jun de 20263 min
episode Indianapolis Local Pulse: Warm Weekend Ahead, Sidewalk Upgrades, and Juneteenth Celebrations artwork

Indianapolis Local Pulse: Warm Weekend Ahead, Sidewalk Upgrades, and Juneteenth Celebrations

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Saturday, June thirteenth, twenty twenty six. We wake up today with calm weather over most of Marion County, a nice break after the strong storms that rolled through parts of Indiana earlier this week. Forecasters with the National Weather Service in Indianapolis say we are looking at warm highs in the low eighties, a mix of sun and clouds, and only a small chance of an isolated afternoon shower. That means events downtown around Monument Circle and along Mass Ave should go on as planned, though we will want to keep water and sunscreen handy. Tonight stays mild, and tomorrow looks similar, just a touch more humid. At city hall, we are watching how the new sidewalk and paving plan is rolling out. City officials say crews are focusing this week on stretches of East Washington Street near Sherman Drive, and residential blocks off Keystone Avenue, aiming to reduce pothole complaints that spiked this spring. The council is also reviewing a proposal to add new automated speed cameras in school zones near IPS campuses, with supporters saying it could slow traffic on streets like 38th Street and Michigan Road. On the job front, hiring in Indy stays steady. Local recruiters say warehouse and logistics firms near the I 70 and I 465 interchange are listing dozens of openings, with hourly pay often starting in the high teens. Tech and life sciences companies in the downtown and 16 Tech areas continue to post specialized roles, even as some firms pause remote hiring. Real estate agents report that around three hundred homes are actively listed inside Marion County, with a typical three bedroom around two hundred fifty thousand dollars. Houses near Broad Ripple Avenue and in Irvington are still seeing multiple offers, but the pace has cooled just enough that buyers have a little more time to decide. In business news, listeners on the north side will see a new coffee and co working spot opening along College Avenue near 54th Street next week, while a long time restaurant on the south side off Madison Avenue is closing after more than twenty years, citing higher costs and slower weekday traffic. Looking at community events, we have concerts at White River State Park this evening, a farmers market at Garfield Park this morning, and Juneteenth celebrations continuing through the weekend along Indiana Avenue and at Riverside Park. In sports, the Indiana Fever continue to draw big crowds at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, with analysts at NBC Sports saying the team should be able to reach close to thirty regular season wins this year, a sign of how far the roster has come. The Indianapolis Indians are back home at Victory Field, giving families a classic summer night downtown. For schools, several IPS and township high school teams are celebrating strong finishes in baseball and track, with local athletes heading to regional and national summer competitions. On public safety, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police report several overnight incidents but no city wide emergency alerts. Detectives are investigating a pair of armed robberies on the east side near 10th Street and Shadeland Avenue, reminding us to stay aware in parking lots and to report suspicious activity quickly. Police also note a successful arrest this week of a suspect tied to a string of car break ins near Fountain Square, helped by security camera footage shared by neighbors. We end with a feel good story from the near west side, where volunteers along West Michigan Street spent their Friday evening cleaning alleys and planting flowers near Haughville Park. Neighbors say it is about pride and giving kids a nicer place to play as summer kicks into gear. Thank you for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in on the Circle City. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13 de jun de 20263 min
episode Hot and Sticky Friday in Indy: Storms Tonight, Pride Weekend Ahead artwork

Hot and Sticky Friday in Indy: Storms Tonight, Pride Weekend Ahead

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Friday, June 12. We are starting the day with weather that matters. After early showers moving through the metro and south toward the I 69 corridor, the rain is expected to ease by around sunrise, but we are still looking at a hot, sticky afternoon with highs near 90 and a heat index close to 100. Later tonight, another front could spark stronger storms, so we are keeping an eye on travel, outdoor plans, and evening events. At city hall, the big public safety discussion is a proposal to tighten the curfew for 17 year olds. The public safety committee has advanced the measure, and if the full council approves it, 17 year olds would need to be home by 9 p m Sunday through Thursday and 11 p m on Fridays and Saturdays. That change would affect families across Marion County and could come up again soon. For crime and public safety, officials are still watching the risk from Thursday night severe weather across the region, including tornado activity in northwest Indiana. In Indianapolis itself, the main public safety concern today is the chance that tonight’s storms could bring new disruptions, especially for commuters and people heading to late events. We are also keeping an eye on any fresh police alerts tied to traffic, flooding, or storm damage. On the jobs and business front, the metro’s service and event economy stays busy this week, with hiring pressure strongest in hospitality, retail, and summer operations tied to downtown and the airport corridor. Real estate remains tight, with buyers still facing limited inventory in core neighborhoods near Broad Ripple, Fountain Square, and Irvington, while higher rates continue to slow some sales. There is plenty happening culturally. Indy Pride weekend begins to build today, with Tash Sultana set for Everwise Amphitheater tonight, and the larger Pride celebration moving into Saturday around Mass Ave and downtown. That will bring crowds, road activity, and a lot of energy to the city center. We also have more local events on deck, including Mahler’s Symphony No. 6 at the Indianapolis Symphony and other live music and community gatherings across the city through the weekend. In sports, the Fever’s homestand at Gainbridge Fieldhouse keeps downtown lively, and local youth and school programs are finishing the week strong as summer competition ramps up. And one feel good note, city neighborhoods are leaning into summer with markets, block events, and neighborhood gatherings that keep drawing people together after a rough weather week. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12 de jun de 20262 min
episode Indianapolis Local Pulse: Heat, Storms, and Road Funding Debate - June 11, 2026 artwork

Indianapolis Local Pulse: Heat, Storms, and Road Funding Debate - June 11, 2026

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Thursday, June 11, 2026. We wake up today with our eyes on the sky. The National Weather Service in Indianapolis says we sit in hot, muggy air again, with highs in the low 90s and heat index readings near 100. Scattered storms build this afternoon and evening, and a few can turn strong with heavy rain and gusty winds, so we keep an eye on the radar if we are out driving along I 65 or heading downtown. Showers and storms linger tonight, then we cool just a bit heading into the weekend. At City Hall, the big story is how we pay for our roads. 13News reports that state lawmakers are dangling roughly 50 million dollars a year in extra road money for Marion County, but only if the county matches it with its own 50 million. To do that, councilors float higher vehicle registration fees, with most car owners paying about 100 dollars more a year. The plan is still up for council debate, and it would change how we feel renewing plates at the BMV on Madison or East Washington Street. In jobs, we see some opportunity today. Best Hire Career Fairs hosts the Indianapolis Job Fair from 11 to 2 at the Holiday Inn Indianapolis Carmel on Pennsylvania Parkway. Dozens of employers are expected, so we can polish the resume and maybe land that next step. Real estate agents across Marion and Hamilton Counties say the market stays tight, with homes around the median price still getting multiple offers within a week, especially near Broad Ripple and Fountain Square. Higher rates cool things a bit, but demand for anything under about 300 thousand remains strong. Downtown, Monument Circle comes alive with the Indy Strawberry Festival from 9 to 4. Local organizers promote shortcake, live music, and food tents circling Christ Church Cathedral, turning our lunch hour into a summer tradition. Tonight, The Calling plays the Vogue in Broad Ripple, and White River State Park draws crowds to the lawn along Washington Street for outdoor shows. On the schools front, Noblesville Schools leaders continue their push for a new operating referendum, as reported by 13News, saying they need added funds to keep class sizes stable and stay competitive on teacher pay. Turning to crime, Indianapolis Metro Police confirm a 27 year old man is now under arrest in the shooting death of 26 year old Amanda Jones, killed last November inside a home on Turtle Creek Drive on the south side. 13News reports he was taken into custody along Keystone Avenue after months on the run. Police also say the FBI now offers a 10 thousand dollar reward for tips leading to the arrest of homicide suspect Lamar Browning, reminding us to stay aware and call in any credible information. For a feel good note, local veterans and neighbors gather this morning for the Vet to Vet meetup on East Pleasant Run Parkway, sharing coffee, stories, and support, a reminder that our city’s strength often shows up in small rooms, not big headlines. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11 de jun de 20263 min
episode Indianapolis Local Pulse: Politics, Weather, and River Cleanups - Sunday, June 7th artwork

Indianapolis Local Pulse: Politics, Weather, and River Cleanups - Sunday, June 7th

Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Sunday, June seventh. We wake up today with politics in the spotlight downtown, after the Indiana Democratic State Convention wrapped up yesterday at the Convention Center. WFYI reports that Democratic treasurer nominee Coumba Kebe is calling for more transparency in how the state invests our money, including clearer public reporting and more online access to data. That debate over dollars could shape how our schools, roads, and local projects are funded over the next few years. At city hall, we are watching how those state-level conversations may dovetail with local budget planning due later this summer, especially for road work along Washington Street and neighborhood safety programs near East 10th and Meridian. Weather-wise, we start with mild morning temps and increasing clouds. We stay warm and a bit humid this afternoon, with a chance for a pop-up shower that could briefly slow outdoor plans. For anyone heading to church services or brunch in Fountain Square or Mass Ave, roads stay dry for most of the day, but keep an umbrella handy for late-day sprinkles. Overnight, we cool off slightly with a similar warm pattern expected tomorrow. On the culture front, music lovers who were at The Vogue last night on North College Avenue caught Augustana and Phantom Planet in a packed, high-energy show. Tonight, arts fans can swing by the Contemporary Art Museum Indianapolis, where Herron School of Art and Design is hosting the Entanglements exhibit, exploring connections across borders in contemporary art. Looking ahead, Gainbridge Fieldhouse is gearing up for a busy Fever schedule this month, including a home game against Atlanta and the Chicago Sky. That means more traffic and energy along Pennsylvania and Maryland Streets on game nights, and more part-time jobs in concessions and security. In local sports, high school all-stars from across Indiana are preparing for the Indiana versus Kentucky All-Star basketball matchup also scheduled at Gainbridge later this month, giving some of our Marion County seniors one last big stage before college. On the job and real estate front, local recruiters report that warehouse and logistics jobs on the southwest side near Ameriplex Parkway remain in high demand, with wages starting around the mid teens per hour. Realtors say the median home listing in Marion County sits in the low three hundreds, with starter homes near Irvington and Beech Grove still moving quickly when priced right. Public safety officials report a relatively quiet overnight period, with IMPD noting a few car break-ins near Broad Ripple Avenue and College, and a domestic disturbance on the west side that led to one arrest but no life-threatening injuries. Officers continue to remind us to lock cars, remove valuables from seats, and check porch cameras after dark. For community events, the state events calendar highlights a bank fishing workshop at Belmont Beach along the White River this morning, giving families a chance to learn basic fishing skills and enjoy the riverfront together. Our feel-good story today comes from volunteers along the White River, where neighborhood groups spent yesterday morning picking up trash near Riverside Park. Organizers say they filled dozens of bags and are working with the city on more frequent cleanups, making the river a more welcoming place for walking, biking, and paddling. Thank you for tuning in and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check-in. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7 de jun de 20263 min