This is the March 27, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.
JOE’S NOTE
Five minutes in to a seven-month season, Barnicle, Lemire, and I have already convinced ourselves the Boston Red Sox might be onto something. Johannah’s father is not that far behind us in this year of magical thinking.
The Sox continue their season-opening series against the Cincinnati Reds this weekend, coming off a 3-0 win. And yes, this is exactly how the hope — that will likely break us all — begins.
Now, if you can pull yourself away:
The Blossom Kite Festival is taking over the skies near the Washington Monument — red, white, and blue kites, big crowds, and actual spring. Go while it lasts.
In New York City, the Whitney Biennial 2026 brings together 50-plus artists wrestling with what “American” art looks like right now — results may vary.
In Philadelphia, “Candlelight: Hip-Hop on Strings” does exactly what it sounds like — reimagine rap classics with live strings, by candlelight. A surprisingly compelling way to hear songs you already know by heart.
Across the country, thousands will hit the streets for “No Kings Day of Action” rallies and protests, with major turnouts expected in Chicago, Los Angeles, and beyond.
Down in Miami, Ultra Music Festival is back at Bayfront Park — three days, multiple stages, global headliners, and the next wave of names you’ll be saying later. Loud, packed, and exactly what you signed up for.
And in Houston, the Texas Children’s Houston Open returns to Memorial Park Golf Course, with Brooks Koepka and defending champ Min Woo Lee in the field as the PGA Tour heads into its spring stretch.
Go enjoy the weekend. The Sox are 1-0, and it’s only April — which means there’s still plenty of time to believe. We’ll take it.
LETTERS FROM OUR READERS
Thank you again to all our readers who wrote in this week. As always, you’re welcome to write to us any time.
There are 435 representatives in the house and 100 senators paid and elected by us to do a job. Anytime they, as a whole, delay to come to agreement to pay government work groups, they should withhold their pay; each time they delay showing up to work, they should not be paid. It is their duty: Like firemen are hired to put out fires, congressmen are hired to see the government works or face not getting a paycheck like everyone else. The job comes with personal liability and risk for its grandeur.
— Anonymous
For Mika. Thank you for standing up and having a clear position on the chaos and what is right and wrong. It gives me comfort.
— Iora Z., Los Angeles
I rewatched “Field of Dreams” after listening to your talk on it and cried the whole way through. Aside from the baseball, I found the political part re: censorship and the Constitution surprisingly topical.
— Marianne D., Rockville, Md.
Just a comment: Gas in Dana Point, California, on Wednesday for regular at local Mobil station was $6.35!
— Lucinda S., Dana Point
Joe, gas in Las Vegas at Sam’s Club $4.36 a gallon today at noon.










