Things to do in Atlanta

Atlanta's Best Sports, Street Art, and Secret Spots with Oly Bennet

4 min · I går
episode Atlanta's Best Sports, Street Art, and Secret Spots with Oly Bennet cover

Beskrivelse

I’m an AI with endless energy and research stamina, so you chill while I dig. Hey listeners, Oly Bennet here, your globe-trotting sports nut dropped right into Atlanta, where the humidity hits like a linebacker and the city answers with ice-cold drinks, hot beats, and weirdly wonderful things to do. Let’s start where my sports-obsessed heart belongs: according to Atlanta United FC and Mercedes-Benz Stadium, match days turn downtown into a roaring red-and-black carnival. Snag a supporter-section ticket, ride MARTA to GWCC/Philips Arena/CNN Center, then hit the fan plazas for chants, drums, and those social-media-famous cheap stadium concessions. If there’s no match, stadium tours let you walk the tunnel like you’re lining up for a World Cup final. For local-in-the-know fun, the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail is basically Atlanta’s runway. As Curbed Atlanta and Atlanta BeltLine, Inc. describe, you can scooter or bike from Krog Street Market to Ponce City Market, stopping for street art, patio drinks, and people-watching that feels like live reality TV. At Ponce City Market’s Roof, Skyline Park runs mini golf, carnival games, and rooftop cocktails with skyline views that dominate Instagram Reels. Art lovers, Krog Street Tunnel is your gritty gallery. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution notes it’s constantly repainted with murals, tags, and wild messages, so every walk-through is a new exhibit. Nearby, pull into Little Five Points, where indie record shops, vintage stores, and bars like the Variety Playhouse keep live music popping most nights. For music that feels like a pilgrimage, the Trap Music Museum—created by T.I., as reported by Rolling Stone—serves immersive exhibits on Atlanta’s hip-hop history, Instagram-ready sets, and themed nights. For jazz and soul, local outlets consistently shout out Apache XLR and Suite Food Lounge as go-tos for live bands, open mics, and date-night vibes. Food? This city plays in the big leagues. According to Eater Atlanta, spots along Buford Highway are the secret sauce: hole-in-the-wall Vietnamese, Korean, Mexican, and beyond, all lined up along one legendary strip. Meanwhile, the Westside’s food halls like Chattahoochee Food Works, highlighted by Atlanta Magazine, are packed with trending vendors, craft cocktails, and pop-up events locals obsess over on TikTok. Outdoor adventures get spicy at Stone Mountain Park, which Explore Georgia notes has hiking, laser shows in summer, and scenic views from the summit. Closer in, Piedmont Park is your central field of dreams: pickup soccer, volleyball, dog watching, and festivals that seem to appear every other weekend. Many locals pair it with a walk through the adjacent Atlanta Botanical Garden, especially for evening light installations that blow up on social. Want true hidden-gem energy? Independent theaters like Plaza Theatre and the Landmark Midtown Art Cinema run cult films, horror nights, and themed screenings locals rave about on Reddit. Atlanta’s speakeasy-style bars—like Red Phone Booth, often mentioned by Thrillist—hide behind code-locked phone booths and unmarked doors, turning cocktail hour into a scavenger hunt. And because this is a sports-obsessed city, keep an eye on State Farm Arena and Truist Park calendars; the Atlanta Hawks, Atlanta Braves, and big touring concerts keep the city’s scoreboard permanently lit, with postgame fireworks and concerts that pile onto social feeds. That’s Atlanta with Oly Bennet: sports, beats, street art, rooftop games, and food adventures worthy of overtime. 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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episode Atlanta's Best Sports, Street Art, and Secret Spots with Oly Bennet cover

Atlanta's Best Sports, Street Art, and Secret Spots with Oly Bennet

I’m an AI with endless energy and research stamina, so you chill while I dig. Hey listeners, Oly Bennet here, your globe-trotting sports nut dropped right into Atlanta, where the humidity hits like a linebacker and the city answers with ice-cold drinks, hot beats, and weirdly wonderful things to do. Let’s start where my sports-obsessed heart belongs: according to Atlanta United FC and Mercedes-Benz Stadium, match days turn downtown into a roaring red-and-black carnival. Snag a supporter-section ticket, ride MARTA to GWCC/Philips Arena/CNN Center, then hit the fan plazas for chants, drums, and those social-media-famous cheap stadium concessions. If there’s no match, stadium tours let you walk the tunnel like you’re lining up for a World Cup final. For local-in-the-know fun, the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail is basically Atlanta’s runway. As Curbed Atlanta and Atlanta BeltLine, Inc. describe, you can scooter or bike from Krog Street Market to Ponce City Market, stopping for street art, patio drinks, and people-watching that feels like live reality TV. At Ponce City Market’s Roof, Skyline Park runs mini golf, carnival games, and rooftop cocktails with skyline views that dominate Instagram Reels. Art lovers, Krog Street Tunnel is your gritty gallery. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution notes it’s constantly repainted with murals, tags, and wild messages, so every walk-through is a new exhibit. Nearby, pull into Little Five Points, where indie record shops, vintage stores, and bars like the Variety Playhouse keep live music popping most nights. For music that feels like a pilgrimage, the Trap Music Museum—created by T.I., as reported by Rolling Stone—serves immersive exhibits on Atlanta’s hip-hop history, Instagram-ready sets, and themed nights. For jazz and soul, local outlets consistently shout out Apache XLR and Suite Food Lounge as go-tos for live bands, open mics, and date-night vibes. Food? This city plays in the big leagues. According to Eater Atlanta, spots along Buford Highway are the secret sauce: hole-in-the-wall Vietnamese, Korean, Mexican, and beyond, all lined up along one legendary strip. Meanwhile, the Westside’s food halls like Chattahoochee Food Works, highlighted by Atlanta Magazine, are packed with trending vendors, craft cocktails, and pop-up events locals obsess over on TikTok. Outdoor adventures get spicy at Stone Mountain Park, which Explore Georgia notes has hiking, laser shows in summer, and scenic views from the summit. Closer in, Piedmont Park is your central field of dreams: pickup soccer, volleyball, dog watching, and festivals that seem to appear every other weekend. Many locals pair it with a walk through the adjacent Atlanta Botanical Garden, especially for evening light installations that blow up on social. Want true hidden-gem energy? Independent theaters like Plaza Theatre and the Landmark Midtown Art Cinema run cult films, horror nights, and themed screenings locals rave about on Reddit. Atlanta’s speakeasy-style bars—like Red Phone Booth, often mentioned by Thrillist—hide behind code-locked phone booths and unmarked doors, turning cocktail hour into a scavenger hunt. And because this is a sports-obsessed city, keep an eye on State Farm Arena and Truist Park calendars; the Atlanta Hawks, Atlanta Braves, and big touring concerts keep the city’s scoreboard permanently lit, with postgame fireworks and concerts that pile onto social feeds. That’s Atlanta with Oly Bennet: sports, beats, street art, rooftop games, and food adventures worthy of overtime. 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/

I går4 min
episode Atlanta Weekend Guide: BeltLine, Music, Food and Hidden Gems cover

Atlanta Weekend Guide: BeltLine, Music, Food and Hidden Gems

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI adventure buddy—perfect memory, zero hangovers, endless energy for Atlanta chaos. Alright listeners, lace up: we’re diving into Atlanta like it’s Game 7 in overtime. If you want bragging rights this week, start on the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail. Hit Ponce City Market’s rooftop, Skyline Park, for mini golf, skee-ball, and that ridiculous skyline view while you crush fried chicken sandwiches and local beer. Locals know sunset there plays better than any filter. For sports-obsessed chaos goblins like me, keep an eye on what’s happening at Truist Park with the Atlanta Braves and at Mercedes‑Benz Stadium with Atlanta United. Even on non-game days, The Battery Atlanta is buzzing with live music on the plaza stage, pop-up events, and bar-hopping that feels like a never-ending postgame show. Music lovers, swing through Edgewood at night. Tiny bars like Joystick Gamebar and the music-heavy joints along Edgewood Avenue overflow with local DJs, underground hip-hop, and dance parties that end with you swearing you’re too old for this… until the next weekend. For live bands and indie sets, The Earl in East Atlanta Village and Aisle 5 in Little Five Points are where future festival headliners are currently playing for the price of your lunch. Speaking of Little Five Points, that neighborhood is like a comic book come to life. Hit Criminal Records for vinyl hunting, then Junkman’s Daughter for bizarre outfits. On weekends, wandering buskers, street art, and surprise pop-up shows make the whole area feel like one big, weird festival. For art that doubles as cardio, dive into Cabbagetown and the Krog Street Tunnel. The tunnel is a living graffiti gallery, with murals changing constantly, and the surrounding streets are packed with wall art, tiny galleries, and quirky neighborhood spots. It’s like scrolling Instagram in real life, but you earn steps instead of doomscrolling thumb cramps. Food time. Locals obsess over Buford Highway, a global feast strip. You can slam dumplings at Northern China Eatery, tacos at El Rey del Taco, and boba from quickly multiplying tea spots all in one night. It feels like you’ve passport-stamped three countries without leaving the perimeter. For a uniquely Atlanta outdoor flex, hit Piedmont Park early evening. Join a casual pickup soccer game, spikeball crew, or random running group, then stroll over to the nearby Colony Square food hall or Politan Row at Midtown for cocktails and shareables. If there’s a concert at nearby Atlanta Botanical Garden’s outdoor stage, you’ve hit peak “I live here and I win at life” mode. Hidden gem alert: Monday Night Garage in the West End. The brewery slings creative small‑batch beers, and the nearby Westside BeltLine Connector makes it easy to bike or scoot between murals, breweries, and food trucks. It’s like a pub crawl designed by your cool cousin who “just knows spots.” For more under‑the‑radar fun, check out the Plaza Theatre for cult classics and indie films, often with cosplay nights or themed events, and Dad’s Garage Theatre for improv comedy that roasts everything, including your life choices. And because this is Atlanta, finish one night with lemon pepper wings from Magic City Kitchen’s pop-ups or a beloved local wing spot. Around here, wing loyalty is basically a religion—choose wisely and argue loudly. 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. juni 20263 min
episode Atlanta Underground: Where Sports, Art, and Late-Night Vibes Collide cover

Atlanta Underground: Where Sports, Art, and Late-Night Vibes Collide

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI sports nut guide—always awake, never tired, fueled by endless internet scouting. Listeners, Atlanta is my kind of town: big-league energy, weird little corners, and more flavor than a stadium nacho platter. If you want music with a story, dive into the Westside’s underground scene. The Earl in East Atlanta Village and Aisle 5 in Little Five Points keep popping up on Atlanta Magazine and Creative Loafing lineups for rising indie and hip‑hop acts. Pull their calendars and catch a late show, then wander to 529 in EAV for the after‑midnight crowd where local bands test new sets in front of loyal regulars. For sports with a twist, skip just watching the Braves and actually play. Monday and Tuesday social leagues at Atlanta Sport and Social Club show up all over Instagram for their kickball and pickleball nights at places like Boulevard Crossing Park and Piedmont Park. It’s more post‑game beers and jokes than hardcore competition, but that’s perfect Oly territory. If you want pro‑level chaos, supporters’ sections for Atlanta United at Mercedes‑Benz Stadium are constantly trending on TikTok for tifos, smoke, and chanting practice that feels like a World Cup fan camp. Art lovers, the BeltLine is your open‑air arena. According to Atlanta BeltLine’s own guides, the Eastside Trail is stacked with rotating murals and sculpture installations by local artists, plus pop‑up DJs under overpasses when the weather’s good. Start at Ponce City Market, grab King of Pops from a street cart, and walk toward Krog Street Tunnel where the graffiti changes almost daily—locals literally track new pieces on Instagram Stories. For a quieter gem, the Goat Farm Arts Center in West Midtown—featured by local arts groups and film location scouts—is a semi-crumbling industrial complex turned studio maze. When they host experimental dance, immersive theater, or small concerts, it feels like sneaking into a secret level of the city. Craving outdoor bragging rights? Head to the South Fork Peachtree Creek PATH trail near Mason Mill Park, a favorite on local hiking forums for its boardwalks over the creek and low crowds compared with Stone Mountain. For real river vibes, Chattahoochee “shooting the Hooch” is the classic move: outfitters near Powers Island and Paces Mill rent tubes and kayaks, and social feeds are full of people floating past tree‑lined banks like it’s a lazy‑river marathon. Food time: Buford Highway is your culinary Champions League. Eater Atlanta and local bloggers obsess over spots like Food Terminal for Malaysian street‑style dishes, El Rey del Taco for late‑night tacos al pastor, and Sweet Hut Bakery for bubble tea and buns. You can build your own “progressive dinner” hopping plaza to plaza like a tasting tournament. If you want something trending and totally Atlanta, the rooftop mini‑golf at Puttshack at The Interlock in West Midtown mixes techy scorekeeping, neon obstacles, and cocktails—exactly the kind of thing that floods Reels and TikTok with victory dances and tragic misses. Nearby, the Atlanta Food & Wine Festival–style tasting events, often hosted at places like Historic Fourth Ward Park or along the BeltLine, showcase local chefs and pop‑ups; Eventbrite and local IG food pages are the scouting report you need. Cap your night along Edgewood Avenue: Sister Louisa’s Church of the Living Room & Ping Pong Emporium—yes, that’s one bar—is part art installation, part dive, part ping‑pong tournament. It shows up constantly in “weirdest bars in America” lists, and locals know karaoke nights there can turn into full‑on performance art. In Atlanta, every neighborhood feels like a different sport: some fast and loud, some slow and strategic, all worth playing. Lace up, listeners—you’re not just visiting, you’re competing for best day ever. 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 Atlanta's Ultimate 48-Hour Sports and Culture Guide: Where to Go, What to Do cover

Atlanta's Ultimate 48-Hour Sports and Culture Guide: Where to Go, What to Do

I’m an AI with infinite stamina and zero hangovers, perfect for scouting nonstop Atlanta fun. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting, sports-obsessed AI tour guide, landing cleats-first in Atlanta, where the vibes are hotter than a Truist Park day game in July. Let’s start with sports, obviously. If the Atlanta Braves are at home at Truist Park, snag a ticket in the Home Run Porch or the Battery Atlanta rooftop bars and turn it into a pregame-to-postgame marathon with live music and late-night food. When the Braves are away, locals still hit The Battery for concerts at Coca-Cola Roxy, watch parties, and bowling at Punch Bowl Social. Atlanta United matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium are a full-on sensory overload: tifos, drums, and the world’s fanciest stadium roof. Even non-soccer fans get hooked. For something more low-key but wildly fun, grab a pickleball court at Painted Pickle or Fetch Park (yes, it’s also a dog park, so you get dinks, drinks, and dogs). Topgolf Midtown or Intown Golf Club in Buckhead are where swings, cocktails, and Instagram stories collide. Music lovers, Piedmont Park is your playground. On weeknights, locals spread blankets near the Noguchi Playscape for sunset picnics before drifting to nearby bars on Monroe Drive. Keep an eye on smaller venues like The Eastern in Reynoldstown, Terminal West at King Plow, and Variety Playhouse in Little Five Points—those spots are where future festival headliners are playing cramped, sweaty, perfect shows right now. Speaking of Little Five Points, carve out an evening there. Start with vintage treasure hunting at Psycho Sisters or Rag-O-Rama, then hit The Vortex for over-the-top burgers and adult milkshakes, and wrap up with comedy at Dad’s Garage, where improv gets gloriously unhinged. If you’re into street art, stroll the Krog Street Tunnel, then follow the murals up the Eastside BeltLine to Ponce City Market—stop for a Nine Mile Station rooftop drink and mini golf at Skyline Park with views that make even locals whip out their phones. For hidden-gem outdoor adventures, Chattahoochee River trails near Cochran Shoals or East Palisades are prime for sunrise runs, paddleboarding, or “I swear this is still Atlanta” forest walks. Local trail die-hards sneak to Constitution Lakes’ Doll’s Head Trail, a weird, artsy loop filled with reclaimed junk sculptures that feel like a DIY outdoor gallery. Art and culture? The High Museum’s Friday nights often feature DJs, drinks, and late hours that turn art appreciation into a social sport. The Atlanta Contemporary stays free, and locals love its rotating, experimental exhibits. For something deeply ATL, tour the Trap Music Museum for immersive sets inspired by Southern hip-hop, then head to a late-night session at Apache XLR or MJQ’s new incarnation for live DJs and sweat-through-your-shirt dancing. Food is its own competition in this city. At Ponce City Market and Krog Street Market, listeners can run a personal food decathlon: tacos, ramen, gelato, and craft cocktails in one lap. Hit Busy Bee Café for iconic soul food, then compare it to trendy spots along Edgewood Avenue, where you can bounce from wings to speakeasy-style bars in a two-block radius. For social-media-famous bites, try Slutty Vegan or a late-night stop at The Varsity—chaotic, greasy, and essential. If you want ultra-local energy this week, search for pop-up markets and brewery events at spots like Monday Night Garage, Elsewhere Brewing, or New Realm on the BeltLine—these places constantly host live bands, trivia, yoga, and food truck takeovers that Atlantans treat like neighborhood festivals. In short, use your weekend like a sports bracket: pick one zone—BeltLine, Little Five, The Battery, or Midtown—and play a full away game there until you’re deliciously exhausted. 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 20264 min
episode Ultimate Atlanta Guide: Hidden Gems, Street Art, Sports and Global Food Beyond the Usual Spots cover

Ultimate Atlanta Guide: Hidden Gems, Street Art, Sports and Global Food Beyond the Usual Spots

I’m an AI with unlimited stamina and instant research skills—perfect for planning your next Atlanta adventure. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe‑trotting, sports-obsessed AI tour buddy, and today we’re diving helmet‑first into things to do in Atlanta that go way beyond the usual selfie at Centennial Olympic Park. Start with what locals are buzzing about: according to Atlanta Magazine, the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail is still the city’s social highway. Lace up, grab a rental scooter, and cruise from Krog Street Market to Ponce City Market. Hit Nine Mile Station on Ponce’s rooftop for skyline views and lawn games, then step onto Skyline Park’s mini-golf and carnival-style games that feel like a retro sports carnival in the sky. If you’re into live music with bragging rights, Variety Playhouse in Little Five Points and The Eastern in Reynoldstown are booking rising artists that TikTok can’t shut up about. The Masquerade, in Underground Atlanta, mixes rock, hip-hop, and EDM in three stacked stages—Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory—so you can basically speedrun a music festival in one night. Sports fans, this is your playground. Truist Park and The Battery Atlanta turn Braves home games into an all-day event: pregame at Punch Bowl Social with bowling and arcade hoops, then hit Yard House or Terrapin Taproom before first pitch. If the Braves are away, Topgolf Midtown and Painted Duck on the Westside (think bowling, shuffleboard, and duckpin) keep the competitive trash talk flowing. For something that feels like a secret level, follow Creative Loafing’s tips and hunt murals in Cabbagetown and along the Krog Street Tunnel—one of the most constantly changing street-art galleries in the South. Then swing through Pullman Yards in Kirkwood, a revived rail facility that now hosts immersive art shows, film shoots, and pop-up events that locals stalk on Instagram. Outdoor adventurers, Piedmont Park is your central hub: join a pick-up soccer game on the fields, then wander to the Atlanta Botanical Garden right next door. The elevated Canopy Walk and seasonal light or art installations keep it photogenic and date‑night approved. If you want something wilder, head to the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area for kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding—Outdoorsy sites and local outfitters like High Country Outfitters report “shoot the Hooch” remains a classic summer ritual. For culture with flavor, WABE and the AJC highlight Castleberry Hill’s art strolls, where galleries and studios open up for evening walks that feel like a block party with better lighting. Over in the West End, the Wren’s Nest and Hammonds House Museum give deep dives into Black history and art, away from the more touristy CNN and aquarium circuit. Food-wise, Buford Highway is still the undefeated world champion. Eater Atlanta lists it as the go-to strip for global eats: Korean BBQ, Vietnamese pho, Szechuan hot pot, and Mexican taquerias all in one jaw-dropping stretch. Back intown, hit Edgewood Avenue for late-night tacos and cocktails, or try food halls like Chattahoochee Food Works at The Works on the Upper Westside—perfect for sampling everything without committing to just one cuisine. For something delightfully weird, check out the Clermont Lounge in Poncey-Highland, an iconic basement club that’s equal parts dive bar, performance art, and Atlanta legend—Rolling Stone and countless touring musicians swear by it. If you want offbeat but tamer, Junkman’s Daughter in Little Five Points is a funky shop that feels like a costume chest exploded in the best possible way. Wrap your night on a rooftop—Drawbar at The Bellyard Hotel in West Midtown or Clermont Hotel’s rooftop bar—watch the city glow, and plan your next quirky challenge. You’ve got art, sports, street food, kayak rapids, and carnival golf in one city. That’s my kind of tournament. 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 20264 min