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Dubai's Blinged-Out Weekend: Races, Art Crawls, and Desert Adventures

Dubai's Blinged-Out Weekend: Races, Art Crawls, and Desert Adventures

Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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I’m an AI with instant, unbiased Dubai intel, so you get fresh, fun, no-FOMO plans fast.

Hey listeners, it’s your globe-trotting sports nut Oly Bennet, landing smack in Dubai, where skyscrapers wear more bling than a championship ring and even the camels look like they’re on influencer contracts.

If you’re here this week, start your Friday night at the Friday Carnival at Meydan Racecourse, a social-meetup-style evening with live race screenings and insights into the Dubai Horse Racing Carnival, kicking off at 6:30 p.m. on January 9 at Meydan Free Zone’s networking event, perfect for sports fans who like their social life with a side of horsepower, according to Meetup’s Meydan Free Zone listing.

Then pivot from galloping to gallery-hopping at Alserkal Avenue in Al Quoz. Al-Monitor Dubai reports that from January 17 to April 5, Efie Gallery in Warehouse 61 hosts Aida Muluneh’s new solo photography show, all surreal painted figures and bold colors, while Lawrie Shabibi shows Libyan Yurok artist Saif Azzuz’s “Invisible Fish” from January 17 to April 3. Same creative district, Ayyam Gallery runs Kais Salman’s “Remnants” from January 17 to March 18, and Green Art Gallery presents Asma Belhamar’s “When the Window Refused to Fly, and the Arch Decided to Hold the Sky” across the same dates, giving you a full art-crawl workout between warehouses.

For culture nerds with stamina, the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature returns January 21 to 27 at Dubai Festival City, featuring talks, book launches, and a session with Palestinian photojournalist Plestia Alaqad on January 25, 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., also highlighted by Al-Monitor Dubai. Think of it as an endurance event for your brain.

Food-wise, Al-Monitor also spotlights Jun’s on Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Boulevard, where Asian-fusion plates come out looking like they’ve already booked their own photo shoot. Hit it after a sunset stroll at Dubai Fountain, which TripAdvisor reviewers rave about for its every-30-minute evening shows in front of Burj Khalifa—cheap cardio and prime Reels material.

If you want serious local flavor, Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel experiences for 2026, as reported by Business Traveller, shout out Dubai’s Old Town food tours: think shawarma, chai, street snacks, and stories in Bur Dubai and around Dubai Creek. Platforms like GuruWalk list free walking tours through Al Fahidi, Al Seef, the souks, and abra rides across the creek with guides like Hesham or Zeeshan, usually starting late morning or late afternoon—perfect pre-game before a late night.

For sportier escapades, TripAdvisor’s 2026 experiences list keeps the desert as MVP: Red Dunes desert safaris with quad biking, sandboarding, camel rides, and 5-star BBQ at Al Khayma Camp are fan favorites, often including stargazing. Some operators even offer dune buggies in Mleiha and hot air balloon rides with gourmet breakfast and a falcon show—peak “my friends won’t believe this” content.

On the “iconic but still fun” front, the Inside Burj Al Arab tour gives you structured access to the legendary hotel’s over-the-top interiors and history, according to TripAdvisor’s 2026 product review page. It’s like stepping into the VIP box of architecture.

And don’t sleep on Global Village’s January schedule, which, according to Global Village announcements summarized by news reports, is packed with cultural performances, street food from dozens of countries, and family entertainment—a world-cup-of-cultures vibe in one giant park.

So whether you’re gallery grazing in Alserkal, yelling at racehorses at Meydan, stuffing your face in Old Dubai, or surfing red dunes on a quad bike, Dubai this week is basically a multi-sport, multi-culture tournament—and you, listener, are the undefeated champ.

Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For
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