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We’re getting into sleepy town time here in Palm Springs. The misters are on and the specials are rolling out, but the sidewalks are not rolling up. We’re not deep into sleepy town time, we’re at half past. 

This go-round we have a few events of note, some of the usual suspects, a new outrageously fun tour, and then those specials. Many of our hotels are offering summer rates too, so you can stay local.

It’s a great time to come, but take a tip from the locals: do all the “heavy lifting” before 10 a.m. Late mornings you can stroll the strip under those misters, and stop for bites and happy hours or lunch until you’re ready to pool. They’re still a pleasant temperature, because the weather is deliciously warm during the days and still on the cool end in the evenings. It’s a great place and time to come for a getaway in the desert to recharge. IYKYK.

When you’re not recharging, you’re gonna want something to do. That’s where I come in. Read on: 

June Events

Palm Springs International Short Film Festival — AKA ShortFest Film Festival taking place June 24-30. 

Greater Palm Springs Restaurant Week through June 8 — I’ve put the link here for you to explore, but I’ve also got a post with all of the participating Palm Springs restaurant all sorted out for you. 

Beale AFB Air and Space Expo 2025 — June 7 at 8 a.m.-June 9 at 5 p.m. at the Palm Springs Air Museum. Showcasing the cutting-edge capabilities of the U.S. Air Force and fostering community connection to its vital mission. For more about the show and Beale, click here.

Happy Hours

Lulu California Bistro — Happy Hour: Daily from 11 a.m. until closing (bar area only). Specials: $5.99 domestic beers, $8.99 specialty cocktails, and discounted bar bites.

Trio Palm Springs — Happy Hour: Daily from 4 to 6 p.m. in the bar; all day on Tuesdays in the bar and misted patio. Specials: $6 wine and well cocktails, $4 beer, $10 well martinis, and 25% off all bottles of wine on Wednesdays.

Zin American Bistro — Happy Hour: Weekdays from Noon to 6 p.m.; weekends from 3 to 6 p.m. (bar area only). Specials: $2 off draft beer, $8 well cocktails, champagne and wine specials, and a selection of happy hour snacks.

Chill Bar Palm Springs — Happy Hour: Tuesday to Saturday until 7 p.m.; Sunday from 2:30 to 7 p.m. Specials: half off all well drinks, $1 off draft beer, and $2 off wine.

Food and Drink Specials (Outside of Restaurant Week)

Kaiser Grille has a sunset special, which is what most restaurants call an early bird special, but we’re no longer naming things after birds. We’ve already got our beloved snowbirds, and an awful lot of real birds. I don’t know if that’s the real reason — likely not as I made up. 

The point being, if you enjoy an early dinner and like to pepper the rest of your evening with bar bites and cocktails along the way, this is a great choice. I learned long ago, you gotta eat before you party. Here’s what you get: two courses (one first and one entrée). The first course is on them, you pay for your entrée. Butts in seats by 5:30 p.m. please. Tuesdays are Tomahawk Night — the kind you eat, not throw. I’m sure we could find a bar in a 20-mile radius that has the latter available if you really feel the need.

Lulu California Bistro — Daily lunch specials starting at $12.99, including a main course and beverage.

Trio Restaurant — “Wine Wednesdays” offer 25% off all bottles of wine.

Zin American BistroWeekend brunch specials include $5 mimosas and Bloody Marys.

Chill Bar Palm Springs — “Sunday Funday” features $5 Bloody Marys and mimosas until 2 p.m. (Food menu varies but includes brunch items.)

The Tropicale — Three-course prix fixe dinner menu available Sunday through Thursday for $39.

Eight4Nine Restaurant & Lounge — “Martini Mondays” come with an optional food pairing menu and lounge bites.

Entertainment

Acrisure Arena: June 21: Banda MS, June 29: Hot Wheels Monster Trucks Live – Glow N Fire 

PS Underground — Their schedule so far is going into July, and you will not be disappointed in the food or the entertainment. Tables are banquet style, but your meal has been especially designed for the show and it’s so “satisfying and delicious, you may even eat the dishes.” (Don’t do that, the dishes aren’t edible, it’s a song by Willie Wonka.)  

Most of the tours have shut down for the season, but not one of the newest tours on your dance card: Drag and Fly Tours. A unique tour by Palm Springs’ most engaging Queens, Drag and Fly Tours is a one-of-a-kind experience that mixes live drag performances, storytelling, and video to showcase Palm Springs’ most iconic sights. Wait until you get a load of the bus!

Palm Springs VillageFest: Held every Thursday evening in downtown Palm Springs, offering art, entertainment, shopping, and food on Palm Canyon Drive.

Palm Springs Cultural Center: This June the Center reverts back to its roots, a movie house, playing all of the classics you’d love to see on the big screen all summer long. Built in the late 1960s and the first cineplex in the Valley, the Palm Springs Cultural Center was formerly Camelot Theatres. The sound and picture here are so fantastic that a wide variety of film festivals call it home. From screwball comedy Sundays to Hitchcock to director’s cuts of well received movies. Many of these will have a Q&A right after, and if you’re a cinephile, this is heaven.

Events include: a Hitchcock retrospective and Q&A for Dial M For Murder (June 6), The Graduate (June 13), All About Eve (June 20), and Oklahoma! (June 29)

Coming soon

And for future you, advance tickets are now available for the Broadway’s Best…In The West concert series, returning in the fall with their third season. Executive produced by Dr. Tom Truhe and presented by the Palm Springs Cultural Center, these events sell out very fast. This year, the musical guests will be: Paulo Szot, Sierra Boggess, Jessica Vosk, Tony Yasbeck. The shows being in December and run once a month until the last show in March.

That’s it for June, we’ll be heating it up next month and if all goes as it usually does, we’ll be moving into Splash House time in the beginning of August.

Don’t forget about the Palm Springs Surf Club, it has surfing, a restaurant and a few new events you might like to check out like the all swim. It’s a pretty cool place!

Ciao for now!

“Doing nothing is hard. You never know when you’re done.” — Steve Martin

Welcome to June in Palm Springs! The temps are hot, and the pools are cool, so it’s the perfect time for a rain-free vacation in the land of sun and stars. 

Days are spent lounging poolside, shopping for vintage, or enjoying a nosh at one of our local restaurants. If it’s particularly warm, and you can’t take the heat, you can spend a day up in the cool of Mount San Jacinto State Park (take the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway up). If you’re going to hike make sure to take water, follow the trail, bring a flashlight, and check for the time of sundown. No one likes to get stuck on the mountain, although it is interesting for locals watching your little lights trying to find their way down at night. 

Speaking of night, there’s still plenty of stuff to do, but make sure you spend a few moments gazing at the stars. We have low light pollution outside of the major streets, so there are lots and lots of bright twinkly stars to be seen in the night sky. 

Must-dos in Palm Springs this June

A woman pours dressing on her shrimp and crab Louis salad at Ingleside Inn in Palm Springs, California

Melvyn’s Restaurant at the Ingleside Estate is participating in Greater Palm Springs Restaurant Week. Photo courtesy of Melvyn’s

June 1: PS Card Show convention offers all the collectibles in cards — sports, Pokémon, whatever else card collectors collect, I have no idea. I am trying to get rid of stuff. But you do you. No judgment. (Maybe a leeetle — just a skoosh!)

May 31-June 9: Greater Palm Springs Restaurant Week — pick a couple of places you’ve always wanted to go, and benefit from their discounted prices. Not everything on the menu will be available at this special rate, but you’ll get a good taste and a feel for the place.

June 7 and 8: Big Gay BBQ — June is Pride month for most cities who celebrate, but we have it in November. That doesn’t mean we can’t throw a party in June though. On Arenas.

June 11: Movies in the Park: Ferris Bueller’s Day Off in the Downtown Park next to Marilyn. 

June 18-24: PSIFF presents ShortFest at the Palm Springs Regal Theaters. Short films from around the world. Check it out.

June 20: GameAcon West at the Palm Springs Convention Center. “Where fans unite for competition, cosplay, merchandise, parties, and more.” I hope they dress up and come out to play. I miss Let’s Make A Deal.

Crystal Fantasy Psychic/Healing Fair on Saturdays and Sundays. There’s usually at least two psychics/readers in different practices. Plus they’ve got crystals galore. Robert Downey Jr. has been a customer for over six years.

Historical Society private tours — group walking and biking tours are over for the summer, but you can still book a private tour. You bring the ride, they provide the guide. 

PS I Love You scavenger hunt at PS Art Museum — unleash your inner detective as you delve into the heart of Palm Springs. Engage with friendly locals, discover intriguing tales of history and culture and capture the essence of the city in photos, videos, and audio files.

Cascade Lounge in Agua Caliente Palm Springs. Check website for special events. Throw some money in a slot while you’re there, or save your dough and have dinner in their terrific steakhouse.

Agua Caliente Cultural Museum and Séc-he Spa

Get cultured

PS Underground — there’s nothing like it anywhere but Palm Springs: creative and themed live shows featuring some of Palm Springs’ finest entertainers, with delicious culinary delights sprung straight from the mind of Chef Dave. Great event space, too.

Revolution Stage Company — you should definitely book an evening or afternoon show here. There’s nothing like live entertainment, and Palm Springs is all entertainers and artists, so Revolution has a little bit of everything. Musicals, cabarets, comedy, piano riots, burlesque shows, and well, you just never know. Their homegrown productions have been fantastic so far, and next up is Baby the Musical running through June 9. 

Coming in from far away places:

June 15: Irene Tu, an L.A.-based stand-up comedian of Comedy Central and Netflix fame. 

June 27, 28, and 29: The Edgar Allen Poe Speakeasy, a chilling cocktail experience lifting four of his stories off the page and onto the stage. Poe historians are pairing each tale of horror with four classic cocktails to set the mood. 

Palm Springs Cultural Center — film festivals and special events fill the Center during the summer. Located in the historic Camelot Theatre, they have the largest screen in the Coachella Valley.

June 14: Leanna and the Free Agents Space Odyssey, an immersive music experience

Wine, tequila, and tacos — what more do you need?

The Plush Cosmo in a martini glass

The Plush Cosmo at V Wine Lounge. Photo by Gregory Douglass

V Wine Lounge — Live music Monday through Friday (Karaoke on Wednesday)

Reforma Nightclub — it’s a nightclub and a restaurant. Check their schedule for DJs and music. Closed Tuesday and Wednesday.

Tequila Tuesday’s at Zin — 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., get 25% off tequila cocktails. (OT: I recently had their mussels in wine and frites. Thumbs up!)

Tuesdays at Maleza (in Drift Hotel) there’s live Latin music from 7 to 9 p.m.. Happy hour starts at 3 p.m.

Thursdays at Drift: 7 to 10 p.m. is Jueves de Drift. Tap into the Cabo spirit weekly with live DJs, $5 tacos a la plancha, $5 beer, $8 cocktails, and night swims.

Village Fest — Thursdays, 7 to 10 p.m., Tahquitz and Palm Canyon is a great place to start. Parking can be an issue, but not if you’re staying in one of our downtown boutique hotels! 

Wang’s in the Desert is back. In the Rat Pack era it was called Jilly’s (he was one of Frank’s guys). I just checked and they’re bringing back entertainment, and it looks like Keisha D will be headlining. She’s a terrific performer with an incredible voice, so have a meal and let one of our desert divas take you to church!

And last, the Twin Palms neighborhood has opened a mid-mod little free library on Navajo Road between La Jolla Road and Marion Way. The neighborhood is also sponsoring a $2,000 scholarship in architecture. 

And that’s it for June. Stay hydrated, wear sunscreen, and please stay and shop local. It’s imperative in small towns, and if you’ve ever been here, you know ours is pretty special.