A rare parade of planets is coming into better view in the second half of June, and even the moon will join the show.
The current early-evening sky is completely devoid of any of the five bright planets you can see with the naked eye (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn). You have to wait until the second half of the night to see any of them, and then they will slowly come into view, one by one, and just before sunrise, all five will be stretched out across the southern and eastern sky.
Certainly, it is not unusual to see two or three bright planets in a single glance, but to have five in view simultaneously is something quite special. This week's alignment will be quite "tight," with the five worlds appearing to stretch across an arc only about halfway across the sky from east-northeast to almost due south roughly about a half hour before sunrise.
https://www.space.com/five-planets-align-rare-skywatching-june-2022
https://skyandtelescope.org/press-releases/planet-parade-to-grace-the-dawn-sky-this-month/