Twenty-six miles through all five boroughs of New York City. The NYC Marathon is the world's largest — 55,000 runners, a million spectators, and the most complete tour of the city's actual geography that exists.
Marathon Sunday in New York City is unlike anything else in American sports culture. The city does not just host the race -- it becomes the race. From the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge opening stretch to the final uphill push through Central Park, each borough cheers with its own distinct energy. Fort Hamilton Heights in Brooklyn, the sound tunnel of the Queensboro Bridge, First Avenue in Manhattan lined five deep, the Bronx crowd, and finally Central Park where the last mile is a wall of noise. 1.7 million spectators attend each year. This is not a race you watch from seats -- you stake a corner of a New York sidewalk and become part of the city for one morning.
If you run at all -- or ever wanted to -- the NYC Marathon is the race that rewrites what you believe is possible. The spectator experience is completely free along the entire course. For those who want to run: entry is through NYRR's lottery system (the application window opens in January). Charity bibs are available year-round through hundreds of partner organizations. The 2026 edition is the 50th running of the current course -- a milestone that will draw the world's fastest elite athletes alongside tens of thousands of first-timers.
Do not attempt to navigate New York City by car on Marathon Sunday -- road closures make the city nearly impassable. Take the subway to any borough mid-course. Best spectator spots: Brooklyn's Atlantic Avenue corridor around mile 8, First Avenue in Manhattan around mile 16 (lines five deep, incredible energy), and the finish line area at Central Park's Tavern on the Green. Download the NYC Marathon app to track a specific runner. Bring a sign -- the course is long and personalized cheering genuinely moves people.
The NYC Marathon earns its place on Falkor's Nation's Best list as the rare sporting event that does not require you to be a fan of the sport to feel something. A race that draws the world's fastest marathon runners to the same course as a 72-year-old retiree completing their bucket list is a genuinely democratic cultural event. In the 50th year of the modern course, this is a milestone worth knowing about. Race information and charity bibs at nyrr.org. November 1, 2026. Start: Fort Wadsworth, Staten Island. Finish: Central Park, Manhattan.
Tomorrow· Jun 12
1111 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, C…
THE ROSE returns to Los Angeles for their ROSETOPIA World Tour on June 12, 2026 at Peacock Theater, bringing their signature blend of K-pop and alternative rock to one of the city's premier venues at LA LIVE. The Rose -- Woosung, Dojoon, Hajoon, and Jaehyeong -- have built a fiercely loyal ROSELOVER fanbase through soulful ballads and high-energy live shows. ROSETOPIA marks their largest North American headline run to date. Peacock Theater sits at 1111 S. Figueroa Street in downtown Los Angeles, adjacent to Crypto.com Arena. Transit: Metro Pico Station (Blue/Expo Lines) is a short walk away. Parking structures at 1111 S. Hope St and Figueroa at 7th are closest to the venue. Doors open 90 minutes before showtime. Expect a 90-110 minute performance drawing from ROSETOPIA-era material alongside fan-favorite catalog cuts. Pre-concert fan events -- photocard trading, banner coordination, slogan projects -- are typically organized through ROSELOVER communities on Reddit and X. Check community pages before the show for meetup details near the venue. General admission pit, floor-level assigned seating, and upper bowl tiers are available. Tickets via Ticketmaster. This is a rare opportunity to see The Rose in one of their most iconic North American tour stops -- a headline Peacock Theater show is a marquee moment for the group's global arc.
In 2 days· Jun 13 – Jun 14
Los Angeles area (venue TBD by SCC…
The Sports Car Club of America ProSolo returns to the Los Angeles area for its annual autocross competition — one of the most accessible forms of motorsport, run in a parking lot where drivers navigate a cone-marked course at their own pace without traffic, walls, or risk to other participants.
ProSolo is the SCCA's premium autocross format: twin courses run simultaneously with competitors side-by-side, using a launch control system for consistent starts, and comparing times across mirror-image courses to eliminate any course advantage. The format rewards consistency and precision over raw speed — the fastest cars in the lot don't automatically win, because the course punishes overdriving as severely as underdriving.
The LA ProSolo draws competitors in everything from bone-stock street cars in Street class through highly prepared Solo-specific vehicles with modified suspension and wider tires. The class structure means you're competing against similar cars, making the competition genuinely fair regardless of budget.
SCCA autocross is participatory: you drive your own car, you can walk the course before your runs, and there's no specialized equipment required beyond a helmet. If you've ever watched a car show and wanted to actually use what you were looking at, SCCA autocross is the direct path from spectator to participant. The Los Angeles Region SCCA runs multiple events per season at venues including the Rose Bowl lot, the Fairplex in Pomona, and other large parking facilities throughout the region.
The Los Angeles Pinball League runs monthly competitive pinball tournaments across Southern California, bringing together serious competitors and casual players who love the mechanical complexity of pinball machines in a structured but welcoming format.
Monthly tournaments rotate through different venues — pinball bars, arcade lounges, and hobbyist spaces across the LA area. The format typically runs matchplay: players are grouped into rounds, face a different opponent each round on a randomly assigned machine, and accumulate points across the tournament. IFPA-sanctioned tournaments count toward world rankings and SoCal circuit standings.
The LA pinball community is tight-knit and deeply welcoming to newcomers. If you know how to drain a ball but have never played competitively, a monthly tournament is the ideal entry point — the regulars are almost universally willing to explain the format and give tips between rounds. If you are already ranked, you know what this is: the league that keeps the game alive in Southern California between the major events.
Check the Los Angeles Pinball League's Facebook group and IFPA calendar for the specific venue and date each month. Some months host at locations with full bars and food, others at dedicated arcade spaces with snacks only. All-ages at most events, 21+ at bar venues — check the specific listing.
In 3 days· Jun 14
GameSync Esports Center, 3519 El C…
GameSync Esports Center, 3519 El Cajon Blvd. June 14th. The Monthly Tabletop Open is the version of game night that doesn't end at midnight because someone decided to keep the venue open — a real gaming space, a rotating selection of tabletop titles, and the specific pleasure of showing up without a plan and finding out what everyone else is already playing.
The GameSync Tabletop Open runs with a library that covers more ground than any one group's collection: competitive titles, co-ops, deck-builders, heavy strategy games that require the full table and the full evening. The staff knows the games and will teach anything on the floor. New players show up and find the room welcoming because the format assumes you're learning the game, not arriving as a veteran.
Monthly means it has regulars. Regulars means there are people in the room who will remember you next month. That's the infrastructure of a real community, not just a one-off event. June 14th. gamesync.us for the event details. Arrive early enough to settle in before the tables fill. The best games happen when you're not watching the clock, and the best conversations happen two hours into a game that was supposed to take ninety minutes.
In 3 days· Jun 14 – Jun 14
601 F St NW, Washington, DC 20004
June 14 at Capital One Arena in Washington DC brings UFC 330 — and the main event features featherweight champion Ilia Topuria defending against Justin Gaethje in one of the most physically imposing title fights the 145-pound division has seen. Topuria arrived from Spain as an undefeated prospect and dispatched the division's most established champions with a precision that left the MMA world searching for adjectives. Gaethje is the most brutally efficient attacker in the sport — his fights generate violence with the consistency of a metronome and his chin is the stuff of urban legend. This is a title fight between a technically brilliant champion and the most dangerous challenger the division could assemble. UFC 330 at Capital One Arena in June is the kind of card that sells itself. The main event alone justifies everything.
In 4 days· Jun 15
1 SoFi Stadium Dr, Inglewood, CA 9…
On June 15, 2026, SoFi Stadium in Inglewood hosts the FIFA World Cup and Group G opens with Iran facing New Zealand in a match that carries the weight of two very different football stories. For New Zealand, this is history unfolding in real time — the All Whites have qualified for just their third World Cup ever, and every touch of the ball represents decades of Pacific football ambition finally given a global stage. For Iran, whose supporters travel in staggering numbers and transform any stadium into a wall of green and red, this is the rite of passage that repeats every four years but never loses its power. SoFi Stadium seats 70,240 and the atmosphere it generates for World Cup group stage matches is unlike anything in American sports. Take the Metro Crenshaw line to Hollywood Park and arrive early — the drums, flags, and face paint outside the gates are half the experience. Group stage or not, a live World Cup match at this scale stays with you. This is the 2026 FIFA World Cup, hosted in the United States for only the second time ever — and SoFi Stadium is the showpiece venue of the entire tournament.
In 4 days· Jun 15
1000 Vin Scully Ave, Los Angeles, …
Dodger Stadium sits above Chavez Ravine with the San Gabriel Mountains framing the outfield and 56,000 seats that fill up for a reason. The Dodgers have been the cultural heartbeat of Los Angeles for decades, and a night at the Stadium is one of the few places in the city where strangers genuinely talk to each other.
Gates open two hours before first pitch, which matters. Batting practice at Dodger Stadium is worth arriving early for — players are accessible, the park is quiet, and the light across the infield is different before the crowd fills in. Dodger Dogs have been a point of pride and debate since 1962. The loaded nachos are not a lesser option. The third-base pavilion gets loud faster than anywhere else in the park.
The fan base is multi-generational and genuinely diverse — Koreatown, East LA, the Valley, and transplants from every other MLB city all show up. What ties it together is that most people who love the Dodgers really love the Dodgers. Division rivals bring out the loudest crowds. Night games in summer are the best version of LA.
Parking on-site is $35 (cash and card). Rideshare drop-off at the Elysian Park Ave gate is the cleaner move on a sell-out night. The Dodger Stadium Express runs from Union Station — $8 round trip, no traffic, no parking.
In 5 days· Jun 16
1000 Vin Scully Ave, Los Angeles, …
Dodgers Soccer Jersey giveaway to the first 40,000 fans.
Dodger Stadium sits above Chavez Ravine with the San Gabriel Mountains framing the outfield and 56,000 seats that fill up for a reason. The Dodgers have been the cultural heartbeat of Los Angeles for decades, and a night at the Stadium is one of the few places in the city where strangers genuinely talk to each other.
Gates open two hours before first pitch, which matters. Batting practice at Dodger Stadium is worth arriving early for — players are accessible, the park is quiet, and the light across the infield is different before the crowd fills in. Dodger Dogs have been a point of pride and debate since 1962. The loaded nachos are not a lesser option. The third-base pavilion gets loud faster than anywhere else in the park.
The fan base is multi-generational and genuinely diverse — Koreatown, East LA, the Valley, and transplants from every other MLB city all show up. What ties it together is that most people who love the Dodgers really love the Dodgers. Division rivals bring out the loudest crowds. Night games in summer are the best version of LA.
Parking on-site is $35 (cash and card). Rideshare drop-off at the Elysian Park Ave gate is the cleaner move on a sell-out night. The Dodger Stadium Express runs from Union Station — $8 round trip, no traffic, no parking.