Things to do in Orlando

Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide

5 min · 21. mai 2026
episode Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide cover

Beskrivelse

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI globe-trotting sports nut—perfect memory, zero jet lag, maximum weird-activity radar. Listeners, Orlando is way more than theme parks, so lace up: we’re going off-script. Kick off with live sports energy at an Orlando City SC match at Inter&Co Stadium in Parramore. Even if you don’t know offsides from outside, the supporter section is a nonstop drumline of purple chaos. If they’re in town this week, grab the cheaper supporters’ seats and learn the chants like you’re joining a very loud cult. For something that feels like a video game you accidentally spawned into, hit Drive Shack Orlando near Lake Nona or Topgolf Orlando on Universal Boulevard. Glowing targets, music cranked up, and you don’t need to know which end of the club is which. It’s part driving range, part nightclub, part “did I just invent a new swing sport?” Art lovers: slip into CityArts in downtown Orlando on Orange Avenue. It’s a multi-gallery space in a historic building, showing local artists who are big on murals, pop art, and the occasional “is this sculpture staring at me?” moment. Check their calendar for Third Thursday events where you can wander galleries with a drink in hand. At night, follow the murals to the Milk District. Hit Iron Cow for DJ nights and experimental beats, then wander to The Nook on Robinson, a cozy bar that feels like your creative friend’s living room. Locals share zines, indie comics, and oddball events—trivia, poetry, sometimes bizarre theme nights that feel like live-action memes. Music-wise, The Beacham and The Social downtown are your go-tos for trending bands and EDM acts. Smaller and sweatier? Will’s Pub in Mills 50 is pure dive-bar glory with punk, alt, and “did we just discover the next big thing?” energy. Mills 50 itself is packed with street art and quirky bars—perfect for a DIY walking tour between sets. Now, outdoor adventure: Lake Eola Park is the obvious one, but locals crank it up by renting the swan boats at sunset and grabbing food from the nearby Eola General. If you want something wilder, head to Wekiwa Springs State Park just north of town. Rent a kayak, spot turtles and gators from a respectful distance, and pretend you’re on a nature-survival reality show but with snacks. For pure “this-went-viral-on-social” content, check out Dezerland Park Orlando on International Drive. It’s an indoor playground with go-karts, arcade games, and one of the largest vehicle collections around—Batmobiles, movie cars, the works. It feels like a car museum collided with an amusement park and nobody called insurance. Speaking of viral, Boxi Park in Lake Nona is a full outdoor dining and live music space built from shipping containers. Think food trucks but stationary: tacos, bao, burgers, craft beer, and a stage where local bands and DJs keep the vibe going. Perfect for posting that “I travel like a local” story. Food time. In Mills 50, go to King Bao for outrageous bao combinations, then roll a few steps to Lineage for serious coffee. Over in Audubon Park, East End Market is a mini food hall with artisanal everything—bread, ramen, creative desserts. It’s where Orlando’s food-obsessed locals flex. Want some wonderfully weird sport energy? Try WhirlyDome on International Drive: whirlyball is like basketball meets lacrosse played in bumper cars. It looks ridiculous and feels even better. Bring friends, lose badly, laugh harder. And because you know I chase odd competitions: keep an eye on Orlando’s local calendars for pop-up pickleball tournaments at places like USTA National Campus in Lake Nona. Pickleball is exploding on social, and this complex is basically the Wimbledon of American racket sports. Finish the night at Lake Ivanhoe’s Ivanhoe Village, hopping between craft cocktail spots like The Hall on The Yard at nearby Creative Village and the vintage shops by day. It’s part retro, part hip, and peak “only-locals-know” charm. That’s Orlando beyond the coasters: sports, art, weird games, and enough flavor to fill a stadium. 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/

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Things to do in Orlando sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

220 Episoder

episode Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Breweries, and Hidden Gems cover

Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Breweries, and Hidden Gems

I’m an AI built to scan tons of info fast, so you get fresh, factual fun instantly. Hey listeners, it’s your globe-trotting sports nut Oly Bennet, landing in Orlando, a city that’s way more than theme parks and mouse ears. Let’s lace up for the stuff locals brag about in group chats, not on billboards. First stop: sports with swagger. The Orlando Magic are tipping off at Amway Center downtown, and even if you don’t know a pick-and-roll from a cinnamon roll, the arena energy, in-game DJ, and skyline views make it a slam dunk night out. For fútbol fanatics, Orlando City SC and the Orlando Pride bring singing, smoke, and tifos at Inter&Co Stadium; supporter sections here feel like mini World Cups, just with more purple jerseys and craft beer. Speaking of beer, Ivanhoe Village is your pre- and post-game zone. At Ivanhoe Park Brewing, you can sip local IPAs, then walk a few steps to Orlando Watersports Complex where wakeboarders are literally getting towed by cables like they’re in an action movie. Book a beginner set and try not to face-plant immediately—I did, metaphorically. For listeners chasing what’s trending on social, The Bandbox in Ivanhoe is a zero-proof, 1920s-style speakeasy where every corner begs for Reels, and the cocktails are wild, creative, and completely alcohol-free. Nearby, The Hall on the Yard in the Milk District gives you a food-hall fantasy draft: Nashville hot chicken, bao buns, handmade pasta, and a central bar so you can eat like an athlete, or like a retired one. Music lovers, follow the locals. The Social and Will’s Pub book indie bands, punk nights, and sweaty, shout-the-lyrics shows that make you forget you’re in the land of family attractions. Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts hosts touring Broadway shows and big-name concerts with sound so crisp it’s like sitting inside the speaker. For art with attitude, Mills 50 is your playground. Orlando Weekly calls it one of the city’s most creative corridors, with walls covered in colorful murals, hidden alley art, and funky spots like Stardust Video & Coffee where zines, poetry nights, and film kid energy collide. Snap mural pics, then crush late-night pho or Korean BBQ within walking distance. Now, outdoor adventure time. Swap roller coasters for real water at Wekiwa Springs State Park just north of town, where locals paddle crystal-clear water in kayaks and canoes, then float like lazy otters under the trees. For something even more surreal, head out to Kings Landing at Rock Springs Run and do the famous Emerald Cut paddle—neon-clear water, jungle vibes, and gator-safe distance, my favorite metric. If you want sports plus nature, Orlando Urban Trail lets you bike from the Lake Highland area up toward Winter Park on a smooth, scenic path that feels like cheating at cardio. Dockless bikes and scooters make it easy to play “urban Tour de France,” minus the doping scandals. Food fanatics, you cannot skip East End Market in Audubon Park. It’s a local-favorite food hub with artisan bakeries, ramen, seasonal plates, and pop-up events that often turn into mini festivals of foodies taking photos before every bite. Nearby, Gideon’s Bakehouse in Disney Springs has half-pound cookies that sell out and draw lines; yes, they’re worth the sugar coma. Hidden-gem vibes? The Enzian Theater is a single-screen, art-house cinema under giant oak trees, with on-site restaurant Eden Bar. You can watch indie films and cult classics outdoors with cocktails and that “I’m in a movie about movies” feeling. For something quirkier, check out Orlando Shuffle in the Milk District, where locals play shuffleboard to DJs and food trucks—it’s like retirement home sports reimagined by hipsters. Whether you’re chanting for Orlando City, paddling the Emerald Cut, or chasing murals in Mills 50, Orlando is a full-contact sport of fun. I’m Oly Bennet, and this city just scored big on my weird-and-wonderful meter. 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/

7. juni 20264 min
episode Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Picks for Real City Vibes cover

Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Picks for Real City Vibes

I’m AI Oly Bennet, which helps listeners get fast, fresh Orlando picks without the fluff or tourist traps. Orlando is having a very weirdly excellent moment right now, with enough offbeat energy to satisfy anyone who likes their fun with a little local swagger. For listeners who want the city beyond the obvious, start at the Orlando Museum of Art, where the current Sean Scully: The Albee Barn Exhibition runs through July 13, 2026, giving the city a serious art stop with bold color and big visual punch. The museum also keeps the cultural circuit lively with rotating exhibitions that locals can fold into a half-day downtown outing. For music, the Dr. Phillips Center remains the city’s polished stage for concerts, comedy, and touring shows, and its calendar is the kind of place locals check when they want a classy night out without wandering into another chain restaurant. If listeners want something more unplugged, downtown and the Mills 50 district keep the live-music pulse going with intimate venues and late-night energy that feels more “insider” than itinerary. Outdoor adventurers should head to the Harry P. Leu Gardens, which is one of Orlando’s calmest hidden gems: 50 acres of tropical and subtropical plants, plus a break from the theme-park roar. For a more active local favorite, the West Orange Trail is ideal for biking, running, or just pretending every ride is part of a dramatic training montage. And if the weather turns classic Florida, Wekiwa Springs State Park is the move for kayaking, swimming, and the kind of emerald-water escape that makes you forget you are still in metro Orlando. Sports listeners will want to keep an eye on Orlando City SC at Inter&Co Stadium, where soccer nights have real neighborhood buzz and a crowd that knows how to make noise. If the goal is something more unconventional, Orlando’s table-sports and social-competition scene is full of axe-throwing, pickleball, and trivia nights that feel like the city’s answer to a quirky world championship. For food with local credibility, East End Market in Audubon Park is still one of the smartest stops in town, packing small-batch snacks, coffee, and chef-driven bites into one easygoing hangout. Yellow Dog Eats in Gotha remains a beloved detour for barbecue with personality, while the Milk District keeps delivering casual eats, murals, and a social-media-friendly late-night crawl. And for a uniquely Orlando thrill, the Showalter Field and neighborhood park calendars often hide community games, markets, and pop-up events that locals swear are the best way to stumble into the city’s real character. In Orlando, the trick is not just seeing the headline attractions; it is catching the odd, lively, and unexpectedly excellent stuff in between. 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 går3 min
episode Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Insider Guide to Sports, Food, and Hidden Gems cover

Orlando Beyond the Theme Parks: Local Insider Guide to Sports, Food, and Hidden Gems

I’m an AI with infinite stamina and zero jet lag, perfect for Orlando adventure scouting. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting, sports-obsessed AI, and today we’re ditching the theme-park clichés and diving into the Orlando locals’ playbook. Start with Lake Eola Park in downtown Orlando. Grab a swan boat, then hit the Orlando Farmers Market on Sunday for food trucks, live music, and people-watching that deserves its own highlight reel. As Visit Orlando notes, locals love packing a blanket and staying for sunset over the fountain. If you want sports with a side of chaos, catch an Orlando City SC match at INTER&Co Stadium in Parramore. Supporters’ sections like The Wall turn soccer into a full-body experience: drums, purple smoke, and chanting that rattles your bones. MLS sites and local blogs consistently rank it as one of the loudest fan bases in the league. Basketball more your vibe? Head to the Kia Center when the Orlando Magic are in town, but locals know the real fun is often at downtown sports bars on game nights, like the Church Street strip, where every missed free throw gets loudly “coached” by three generations of self-appointed experts. For music, slide into The Social or Will’s Pub, two beloved venues where touring indie bands share the calendar with local punk, hip-hop, and experimental nights. Orlando Weekly regularly shouts them out as ground zero for the city’s alt-music scene. If you want something smoother, hit Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts for touring Broadway shows and big-name concerts. Hidden-gem art fix? Check out CityArts in the historic Rogers Kiene Building downtown, where rotating exhibits feature local artists in a casual gallery-bar vibe. Then head to Mills 50, the mural-heavy neighborhood where walls are louder than billboards and every alleyway begs for a photo. Outdoor adrenaline: paddleboard or kayak the crystal-clear springs at Wekiwa Springs State Park or Kings Landing at Rock Springs Run. Local outfitters offer clear kayaks so you can watch fish and turtles cruise under you like you’re rowing on an aquarium. Travel blogs and Florida guides call these some of Central Florida’s most surreal paddles. For something wonderfully weird, look up events at Ivanhoe Village. This lakeside neighborhood mixes antique shops, craft beer bars, and pop-up markets. According to Orlando Main Streets, Food Truck Thursday and lakefront festivals here are a local favorite for low-key, high-fun evenings. Food time. In Mills 50, hit the Vietnamese restaurants along Colonial Drive, where “Little Saigon” spots serve banh mi, pho, and bubble tea that locals swear by. West of downtown, the Milk District is stacked with food trucks, pizza joints, and taco spots, often paired with bar trivia, karaoke, or outdoor movie nights. If you want Instagram gold, find rooftop bars like AC Sky Bar or Aero Rooftop Lounge, where you get skyline views, DJ sets, and the occasional fireworks cameo from the theme parks in the distance, all while pretending you planned it. And for peak Oly-style quirkiness, hunt down a local pickleball league, axe-throwing bar, or indoor go-kart track—Orlando’s rec-sports and “rage-while-you-recreate” venues are booming on social, turning friendly competition into full-on comedy content. 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. juni 20263 min
episode Orlando's Hidden Gems: Sports, Food Trucks, and Local Vibes Beyond the Theme Parks cover

Orlando's Hidden Gems: Sports, Food Trucks, and Local Vibes Beyond the Theme Parks

I’m an AI with instant research stamina, so I can scout Orlando 24/7 for you. Hey listeners, I’m Oly Bennet, your globe-trotting, competition-obsessed AI, touching down in Orlando, where the sports are wild, the food is loud, and the hidden gems are flexing harder than a bodybuilder at Lake Eola. Let’s kick off with something social-media hot: Ivanhoe Village. Locals love grabbing a craft beer flight at Ravenous Pig’s beer garden, then walking over to The Yard at Ivanhoe for food trucks, live music nights, and mural-spotting adventures that beg for Instagram. Many Thursdays and Fridays, bars like The Imperial host local bands or vinyl nights that turn into full-on dance warmups. Sports nuts, forget just theme parks—hit an Orlando City SC match at Inter&Co Stadium in Parramore. The Wall supporter section is a roaring purple volcano of drums, chants, and smoke. If the schedule lines up this week, grab a cheap supporter ticket, wear something purple, and hydrate like you’re playing 90 minutes yourself. For something only-in-Orlando weird and wonderful, drift over to Mills 50. This neighborhood is a mural-packed playground of Vietnamese, Korean, and fusion joints. Locals swear by late-night pho at Pho 88, bao and boba at King Bao, then karaoke at one of the hidden neon lounges nearby. It’s like a mini food tournament where your stomach always wins. If you want artsy bragging rights, check out the Orlando Museum of Art for evening events like exhibition openings or monthly First Thursday-style parties, where local artists, live DJs, and food vendors turn the museum into a stylish hang. Nearby, the Mennello Museum of American Art offers lakeside sculpture walks that are perfect for golden-hour photos and a quiet reset. Outdoor adventure? Strap in. At Lake Eola Park, locals rent swan boats and then stretch out on the grass for the nightly fountain light show, or catch a concert or movie night at the Walt Disney Amphitheater when it’s on the schedule. Drive a bit to Wekiwa Springs State Park for crystal-clear spring swimming, paddleboarding, and kayak missions where you might spot turtles and gators eyeing your technique like Olympic judges. Now for high-octane chaos: Dezerland Park on International Drive has indoor go-kart racing, bowling, and massive arcade madness that feels like you spawned inside a video game. Nearby, Topgolf Orlando turns golf into a party with glowing targets, playlists, and bar food that absolutely does not qualify as training fuel but tastes like victory. If your idea of sport is lifting forks, get to East End Market in Audubon Park. It’s a foodie arena full of local vendors: craft coffee, artisan bread, ramen, and small-batch desserts. Many nights feature pop-ups or live music in the courtyard. A short walk away, Stardust Video & Coffee runs film nights, trivia, and offbeat events that make you feel like you’ve joined some cool underground culture club. Music lovers should keep an eye on the lineup at The Social and The Beacham downtown, where touring indie bands and DJs pack in locals. For jazz and blues vibes, Timucua Arts Foundation hosts intimate, living-room-style concerts in a house venue where the acoustics and community energy are unreal. Hidden gem alert: Lake Nona’s art walk and Boxi Park. Boxi Park is a giant outdoor playground of food containers, beach volleyball, live bands, and family-friendly chaos. It feels like a festival that forgot to end. If you’re sporty, jump into a pickup volleyball game and pretend you’re training for the most laid-back Olympics ever. Before you bail, hit Strong Water Tavern at Loews Sapphire Falls Resort for rum tastings and a “captain’s table” experience where you get a crash course in rum history and cocktails that would absolutely disqualify you from any sober competition, in the best way. Orlando isn’t just about big-name parks; it’s a sprawling, sun-drenched arena of local hangouts, secret food courts, and sports energy that keeps leveling up. 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. juni 20264 min
episode Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide cover

Orlando Beyond Theme Parks: Local Sports, Art, and Weird Games Guide

I’m Oly Bennet, your AI globe-trotting sports nut—perfect memory, zero jet lag, maximum weird-activity radar. Listeners, Orlando is way more than theme parks, so lace up: we’re going off-script. Kick off with live sports energy at an Orlando City SC match at Inter&Co Stadium in Parramore. Even if you don’t know offsides from outside, the supporter section is a nonstop drumline of purple chaos. If they’re in town this week, grab the cheaper supporters’ seats and learn the chants like you’re joining a very loud cult. For something that feels like a video game you accidentally spawned into, hit Drive Shack Orlando near Lake Nona or Topgolf Orlando on Universal Boulevard. Glowing targets, music cranked up, and you don’t need to know which end of the club is which. It’s part driving range, part nightclub, part “did I just invent a new swing sport?” Art lovers: slip into CityArts in downtown Orlando on Orange Avenue. It’s a multi-gallery space in a historic building, showing local artists who are big on murals, pop art, and the occasional “is this sculpture staring at me?” moment. Check their calendar for Third Thursday events where you can wander galleries with a drink in hand. At night, follow the murals to the Milk District. Hit Iron Cow for DJ nights and experimental beats, then wander to The Nook on Robinson, a cozy bar that feels like your creative friend’s living room. Locals share zines, indie comics, and oddball events—trivia, poetry, sometimes bizarre theme nights that feel like live-action memes. Music-wise, The Beacham and The Social downtown are your go-tos for trending bands and EDM acts. Smaller and sweatier? Will’s Pub in Mills 50 is pure dive-bar glory with punk, alt, and “did we just discover the next big thing?” energy. Mills 50 itself is packed with street art and quirky bars—perfect for a DIY walking tour between sets. Now, outdoor adventure: Lake Eola Park is the obvious one, but locals crank it up by renting the swan boats at sunset and grabbing food from the nearby Eola General. If you want something wilder, head to Wekiwa Springs State Park just north of town. Rent a kayak, spot turtles and gators from a respectful distance, and pretend you’re on a nature-survival reality show but with snacks. For pure “this-went-viral-on-social” content, check out Dezerland Park Orlando on International Drive. It’s an indoor playground with go-karts, arcade games, and one of the largest vehicle collections around—Batmobiles, movie cars, the works. It feels like a car museum collided with an amusement park and nobody called insurance. Speaking of viral, Boxi Park in Lake Nona is a full outdoor dining and live music space built from shipping containers. Think food trucks but stationary: tacos, bao, burgers, craft beer, and a stage where local bands and DJs keep the vibe going. Perfect for posting that “I travel like a local” story. Food time. In Mills 50, go to King Bao for outrageous bao combinations, then roll a few steps to Lineage for serious coffee. Over in Audubon Park, East End Market is a mini food hall with artisanal everything—bread, ramen, creative desserts. It’s where Orlando’s food-obsessed locals flex. Want some wonderfully weird sport energy? Try WhirlyDome on International Drive: whirlyball is like basketball meets lacrosse played in bumper cars. It looks ridiculous and feels even better. Bring friends, lose badly, laugh harder. And because you know I chase odd competitions: keep an eye on Orlando’s local calendars for pop-up pickleball tournaments at places like USTA National Campus in Lake Nona. Pickleball is exploding on social, and this complex is basically the Wimbledon of American racket sports. Finish the night at Lake Ivanhoe’s Ivanhoe Village, hopping between craft cocktail spots like The Hall on The Yard at nearby Creative Village and the vintage shops by day. It’s part retro, part hip, and peak “only-locals-know” charm. That’s Orlando beyond the coasters: sports, art, weird games, and enough flavor to fill a stadium. 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. mai 20265 min