Jupiter is now visible in the eastern sky right. On the East Coast it is currently about the height of a 2-story home. They say you can view 4 of its moons with strong binoculars or a telescope.
https://www.space.com/jupiter-opposition-closest-approach-skywatching
Jupiter tends to be very large and blue, Mars very red, you'll rarely see Venus unless you catch it at dawn or rarely at sunset. There is a reason Venus is the morning star. I highly recommend downloading a celestial body app if you're interested in tracking stars and constellations. It helps a bunch identifying things in the sky and they are free. Everything tracks at very specific degree angles. 45 degrees for planets are a good start.
Awesome, thanks!