What to do in Baltimore

Baltimore's Got It All This Week: Waterfront Festivals, Science Fun, and Pride Celebrations

2 min · 11 jun 2026
aflevering Baltimore's Got It All This Week: Waterfront Festivals, Science Fun, and Pride Celebrations artwork

Beschrijving

Baltimore, if you’re wondering what to do this week, you’re in luck. The city is buzzing, the harbor is awake, and there’s a little something for every listener. According to Visit Baltimore, Waterfront Week is in full swing along the Inner Harbor and nearby piers, running through June 14. That means over a hundred waterfront happenings: pop-up concerts, harbor cruises, outdoor fitness classes, family activities, and food vendors lined up with local crab cakes, ice cream, and street eats. The Water Trolley is running as an all-day hop-on, hop-off ride for just a few dollars, making it easy to glide between Harborplace, Federal Hill, and Fells Point without worrying about parking. For families and the science-curious, the Maryland Science Center’s event calendar highlights all-day “Mousetrap Machines,” where kids can build wild chain-reaction contraptions, plus planetarium shows like “One World One Sky.” It’s a perfect way to keep younger listeners entertained before heading back outside to the waterfront. If you want something rooted in community, Visit Maryland reports the Baltimore Children & Youth Fund Community Exhibition is happening this evening from 5 to 8 PM at the University of Maryland BioPark at 4 North Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Expect live performances, interactive exhibits, food, and plenty of chances to meet local youth leaders and creators. It’s free, indoors, and a great after-work stop. Baltimore Pride is also in full swing this week. The Pride Center of Maryland lists events as part of Baltimore Pride 2026, running June 8 through 14 across the city, centered around 1601 Pennsylvania Avenue and nearby venues. Listeners can look for evening gatherings, resource fairs, and community celebrations that lead into a colorful weekend of pride festivities, music, and nightlife. Music lovers have plenty of options too. Songkick’s Baltimore listings show dozens of concerts across town this week, from intimate indie sets in neighborhood bars to big-name tours at larger venues. It’s a good time to check your favorite spot in Station North, Fells Point, or Federal Hill for a show to cap off a night on the harbor. However you spend it, Baltimore is offering waterfront sunsets, science fun, community celebration, and live music all week long. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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aflevering Baltimore Buzzing This Week: Oddities, Metal, Theater, and Waterfront Vibes artwork

Baltimore Buzzing This Week: Oddities, Metal, Theater, and Waterfront Vibes

Baltimore listeners, if you’re wondering what to do this week, the city is absolutely buzzing with options, from oddities and metal to theater, science, and waterfront vibes. Let’s start with something wonderfully weird. According to Showpass, the Baltimore Oddities and Curiosities Expo is taking over the Baltimore Convention Center this weekend, with hours from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday. Expect taxidermy, dark art, unusual home décor, and a whole market of the strange and bizarre, all right downtown at 1 West Pratt Street. It’s perfect for listeners who love the offbeat side of Charm City. Music fans have a big night lined up. Ticketmaster and Songkick both list Kittie’s “Legacy of Fire” 30th anniversary tour stop at Nevermore Hall in Baltimore this Sunday at 7:30 p.m., with support from Kingdom of Giants and Gore. If you’re into heavy music, this is a rare chance to catch a legendary metal band in an intimate local venue. Over at Power Plant Live, their events calendar shows “215 Sundays” at Geno’s Steaks on site, starting around 2 p.m. Expect a Philly-meets-Baltimore flavor mashup, DJs, and a party atmosphere just steps from the Inner Harbor. It’s a great spot for listeners who want food, drinks, and live energy all in one place. If theater is more your speed, Baltimore Center Stage lists performances of the play “Pray” around 3 p.m. this week, along with a special event called “410Fest” in the late morning and early afternoon. It’s a good excuse to head to the Mount Vernon area, grab a bite nearby, and make a full arts day out of it. For something family friendly and hands-on, the Maryland Science Center’s calendar highlights special programming like “Flying with the Navy” and a rotating slate of IMAX films. The Science Center sits right on the Inner Harbor, so listeners can pair a few hours of exhibits with a stroll along the waterfront or an early dinner. Art lovers should check out Motor House on North Avenue. Their schedule features “Lights to the Lamp: An Exhibition of Alchemy,” an evening-into-night event running through the summer, with visual art, performances, and a bar on site. It’s a great way to experience the Station North Arts District after work or on the weekend. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening in Baltimore. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Gisteren2 min
aflevering Baltimore Celebrates Summer with 50th Annual AFRAM Festival and Packed Weekend Events artwork

Baltimore Celebrates Summer with 50th Annual AFRAM Festival and Packed Weekend Events

Baltimore is having one of its busiest and most festive stretches of the summer, with Juneteenth celebrations still rolling into the weekend and a mix of arts, music, and live entertainment keeping the city lively. According to Baltimore-area event listings, the biggest anchor is the 50th Annual AFRAM Festival at Druid Hill Park, running June 19 through June 21 from noon to 9 p.m. each day, with major performances, food vendors, family activities, and cultural programming all weekend long.[1][2][5] For listeners looking for a classic Baltimore weekend scene, AFRAM is the place to start. Saturday’s lineup, according to CBS News Baltimore, includes acts like The Vibe, Black Assets, J. Brown, Normani, Chloe Bailey, SWV, and The Lox, making it a full-day celebration that blends music history with a very current crowd energy.[5] The festival is also being highlighted as Baltimore’s official Juneteenth celebration, which gives it extra significance this year.[1] If listeners want something a little more intimate, Visit Baltimore lists Color & Center: A Hypnotic Experience on Saturday, June 20 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., offering a creative daytime option in the city.[7] Meanwhile, Baltimore Center Stage is staging Pray on Saturday with a 2 p.m. preview and a 7:30 p.m. performance, giving theater fans a chance to trade the festival grounds for the stage lights.[10] Baltimore Magazine’s weekend roundup also points to a strong lineup of city happenings around the same period, underscoring how packed the weekend is with neighborhood-scale events and downtown activity.[3] And for listeners who prefer comedy over concerts, the Baltimore Comedy Factory has Benji Brown appearing Friday and Saturday, extending the fun into the night.[11] The best move this week is simple: start with AFRAM, then mix in a museum, a theater show, or a comedy set to round out the experience. Baltimore is leaning into celebration, culture, and community right now, and the city feels especially alive when all of it happens at once. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

20 jun 20262 min
aflevering Baltimore's Juneteenth Week: 50th AFRAM Festival, Live Music, and Cultural Celebrations Light Up Charm City artwork

Baltimore's Juneteenth Week: 50th AFRAM Festival, Live Music, and Cultural Celebrations Light Up Charm City

Baltimore, if you’re wondering what to do this week, you’re in luck. The city is buzzing with Juneteenth celebrations, live music, culture, and plenty of ways to enjoy Charm City from now through the weekend. According to JuneteenthEvents.us, one of the biggest happenings is the 50th Annual AFRAM Festival, Baltimore’s official Juneteenth celebration, taking over historic Druid Hill Park all weekend long, from Friday through Sunday, noon to 9 pm each day. Expect national and local performers, food trucks, Black-owned vendors, a family zone, and a full-on celebration of Black culture, all with free admission. Social posts from AFRAM’s organizers highlight big-name musical acts, community resources, and a true festival vibe in the heart of West Baltimore. If you’re looking for something a little more museum-focused, the Reginald F. Lewis Museum is hosting a special Juneteenth program with free admission from 10 am to 4 pm. According to the museum’s event listing, listeners can drop in for history reenactments, panel discussions, kids’ artmaking workshops, and talks that dig into the history and legacy of emancipation in Maryland. It’s a perfect daytime option before heading out to evening events. Over at the Inner Harbor, the Waterfront Partnership’s Rhythm Liberation Fest brings live music and dance to West Shore Park as part of the city’s Juneteenth festivities. The event calendar describes a mix of bands, DJs, and performances celebrating freedom and Black creativity right on the water, with lawn space to stretch out, grab a bite from nearby spots, and enjoy the skyline. For live music fans tonight, Metro Baltimore on North Charles Street is hosting singer-songwriter Esther Rose. The venue’s calendar lists doors at 7 pm and showtime at 8 pm, all ages, with an intimate club setting that puts you close to the stage. Perfect if you want a smaller, indie-feel evening after a day at AFRAM or the museum. Looking ahead to the rest of the week and weekend, Baltimore Magazine’s event calendar points to a mix of comedy, art, and tours around downtown. One highlight is the AudaTours Baltimore Audio Tour: A Tapestry of Memorials, Markets, and Myths, starting at the Bromo-Seltzer Tower. Listeners can walk through the city with a guided audio experience exploring Baltimore’s history, markets, and urban legends, a fun daytime activity before nightlife kicks in. If you’re craving laughs after dark, Yelp’s roundup of things to do tonight in Baltimore points to spots like the Port Comedy Club and the Lou Costello Room at Zissimos Bar, where rotating lineups of stand-up comics keep the energy high into the night. So whether you’re dancing at AFRAM in Druid Hill Park, soaking up history at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum, catching live music at Metro Baltimore, or wandering downtown on an audio tour, Baltimore has your week and weekend fully covered. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening in Charm City. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

19 jun 20263 min
aflevering Baltimore's Packed Week: From Gospel Trap to Juneteenth Festival artwork

Baltimore's Packed Week: From Gospel Trap to Juneteenth Festival

Baltimore is coming alive this Thursday with a mix of music, theater, community gatherings, and early Juneteenth energy, making it a strong start to a packed summer week. According to Ticketmaster, Sainted Trap Choir is at Meyerhoff Symphony Hall tonight at 7:30 PM, bringing a fresh blend of gospel, hip-hop, and choir performance to one of the city’s most beloved stages. According to Baltimore Center Stage, Pray has a preview performance tonight at 7:30 PM, giving listeners a chance to catch one of the city’s most talked-about theater events early in the run. If listeners are looking for something more community focused, according to an Instagram event post for Cylburn Arboretum, Desserts with Dads is happening today from 5 PM to 7 PM at 4915 Greenspring Avenue, with community resources, family engagement, and a fatherhood celebration in the mix. It is the kind of neighborhood gathering that feels especially right for a June evening in Baltimore. The weekend is shaping up around Juneteenth and the AFRAM Festival, which social posts describe as the festival’s 50th anniversary and a free celebration featuring major artists including Normani, Chloe Bailey, Charlie Wilson, and SWV. That makes this a big cultural weekend for Baltimore, with music and celebration at the center of the city’s calendar. For listeners who want to keep the energy going beyond the main festivals, Baltimore Magazine’s events calendar shows a steady stream of local options running through the week and weekend, including art, camps, and neighborhood happenings across the city. Maryland Science Center’s calendar also lists daily programming today, including Braille Basics and planetarium showings, which can be a smart pick for families or anyone wanting an indoor adventure between outdoor events. The best move this week is to mix and match: start with live music or theater tonight, add a community stop on Thursday evening, then save room for Juneteenth weekend celebrations and festival crowds. Baltimore is giving listeners a full menu of ways to get out, hear something great, and feel the city’s summer pulse. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

18 jun 20262 min
aflevering Baltimore's Buzzing This Week: Live Music, Theater, and Community Events Fill the Schedule artwork

Baltimore's Buzzing This Week: Live Music, Theater, and Community Events Fill the Schedule

Baltimore listeners, if you’re wondering what to do this week, the city is absolutely buzzing, so let’s get into it. According to Power Plant Live’s official calendar, Nevermore Hall is throwing down tonight with a big double bill: jam band legends moe. and prog-rock favorites Umphrey’s McGee hit the stage at 7 p.m. Expect long, improvisational sets, light shows, and a crowd ready to dance well into the night. If you love guitar solos, weird time signatures, and that festival vibe without leaving the city, this is your midweek move down by the Inner Harbor. If your style leans heavier, Baltimore Soundstage is hosting Spite with Emmure, Psycho Frame, and Rev3rent, as listed on the venue’s event page. Doors open at 6, show at 7, and it’s pure metalcore energy: breakdowns, screaming vocals, and a pit that will not let up. It’s a perfect option for listeners wanting to blow off steam after work along the waterfront. For theater lovers, Baltimore Center Stage’s schedule shows a preview performance of the play “Pray” this week, with evening showtimes that make it easy to pair with dinner in Mount Vernon. It’s an ideal night out if you’re craving smart storytelling, strong performances, and the feel of one of the city’s signature cultural institutions. If you like planning ahead, the Baltimore Beat events guide is rounding up happenings across the city for this week and into next, covering everything from live music and literary events to kid-friendly activities and community gatherings. Think neighborhood festivals, small gallery openings, craft markets, and food-and-drink pop-ups that give you a real feel for Baltimore’s creative side. Baltimore Magazine’s event calendar is also spotlighting local happenings, including classes, talks, and brewery-based events. It’s a great way to discover something a little different, like an evening lecture paired with a local beer flight, or a casual meetup that turns into a new favorite weekly hang. Whatever you’re into—live music, theater, community events, or just exploring a new neighborhood—Baltimore has something going on every night through the weekend. So pick a spot, grab a friend, and let the city surprise you. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss what’s happening around town. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

17 jun 20262 min