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First…
Golf - Final Door to Augusta
The Valero Texas Open at TPC San Antonio wraps up today — the last PGA Tour event before the 90th Masters begins April 9 at Augusta National. One spot in the field is still on the line for the winner.
Jordan Spieth is the storyline of the week. After an up-and-down start to 2026, he's posted three top-12 finishes in his last four starts and enters San Antonio as a serious contender on a course where he's already won — Valero 2021 ended his 1,351-day winless drought.
Since winning The Open in 2017, Spieth struggled to rediscover the form that saw many label him as the next dominant force in the game — he dropped outside the top 100 in the world ranking. Now he's quietly building again at 32.
Spieth has six top-four finishes at the Masters, including two runner-up finishes, one of which came on his debut at Augusta. He knows what this place feels like when everything's working.
CBS analyst Johnson Wagner says he'd rate Spieth's 2026 season a B+, and believes he's playing with a clear mind: "I think finally he's comfortable in what he's working on." That's the version that wins majors.
Rory McIlroy returns as defending champion trying to become only the fourth player ever — after Nicklaus, Faldo, and Tiger — to repeat at Augusta. His prep has been quiet. Scheffler skipped the last two events ahead of the Masters with his wife expecting their second child.
The redemption framework writes itself: Spieth's 2016 Masters collapse with a five-shot lead still haunts the record books. Augusta in 2026 is his best chance in nearly a decade to rewrite it.
Turn it to …
Music - Live Easter Classics
Aretha Franklin — "Amazing Grace" (Live at New Temple Missionary Baptist Church, 1972). The greatest live recording ever made. Aretha sang this in a church in Los Angeles and the entire room fell apart. If you only listen to one thing this Easter, make it this. → Listen
Johnny Cash — "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord" (Live at Folsom Prison, 1968). Cash sang gospel to inmates. No production, no tricks — just a man, a guitar, and a room full of people who needed to hear it. The silence between verses says everything. → Listen
Elvis Presley — "Peace in the Valley" (Live on The Ed Sullivan Show, 1957). Elvis asked to sing a gospel song on national television and the Colonel almost lost his mind. Elvis didn't care. He sang it anyway. Twenty-five years old, on the biggest stage in America, choosing to sing about peace. → Listen
Kanye West — "Jesus Walks" (Live at the Grammys, 2005). Say what you want about where Kanye ended up. In 2005, he performed this with a choir and a marching band and it was one of the most electrifying Grammy performances in history. The faith was real then. → Listen
Hillsong UNITED — "Oceans (Where Feet May Fail)" (Live, 2013). This song has been played in every church in America at least once. The live version is seven minutes of build that doesn't let you go. Perfect for an Easter morning drive. → Listen
Mahalia Jackson — "How I Got Over" (Live at Newport Jazz Festival, 1958). The Queen of Gospel at Newport. She sang to a folk and jazz crowd and converted the entire field. The footage still gives you chills sixty-seven years later. → Listen
Mumford & Sons — "I Will Wait" (Live at Red Rocks, 2012). Not a gospel song, but the energy is revival-level. The banjo, the crowd singing every word, Red Rocks at sunset. It's the closest a folk-rock band has come to a church experience. → Listen
Time to Eat…
Food - Southern Easter Delicacies
Brown Sugar & Mustard Glazed Ham — the undisputed king of the Southern Easter table. Score the skin in diamonds, pack brown sugar and Dijon into every crevice, baste with the pan drippings. The leftovers are almost better than the main event — ham biscuits on Monday morning. → Recipe
Deviled Eggs — no Southern Easter is complete without them. Duke's mayo, yellow mustard, a splash of hot sauce, sweet relish if that's your family's move, and a heavy dusting of paprika. Make double. They vanish before the ham hits the table. → Recipe
Baked Macaroni and Cheese — not the stovetop kind. The Southern, baked-in-a-casserole-dish, egg-custard-base, crispy-on-top kind. Sharp cheddar. Maybe some Velveeta if your grandmother insists. Don't fight her on it — she's right. → Recipe
Collard Greens — slow-simmered with a smoked ham hock until the pot liquor is its own food group. Splash of apple cider vinegar at the end. Serve with cornbread so you can soak up every drop. Easter in the South isn't Easter without greens on the plate. → Recipe
Buttermilk Biscuits — tall, flaky, butter-brushed, and warm from the oven. They hold the table together. Split one open, pile on ham, add a smear of mustard. That's a whole meal hiding inside a side dish. → Recipe
Banana Pudding — layers of vanilla wafers, sliced bananas, and custard topped with a cloud of meringue or whipped cream. Every Southern family has a version and every Southern family thinks theirs is the best. They're all correct. → Recipe
Pimento Cheese — the pâté of the South. Spread it on celery, crackers, or those buttermilk biscuits. Set a bowl out before dinner and watch the room orbit around it. Sharp cheddar, cream cheese, diced pimentos, a little cayenne. Simple and sacred. → Recipe
Tell your people you love them…
Relationships - Things We Can Learn From Easter
Show up to the table. Easter dinner isn't really about the food — it's about physically being in the room with the people who matter. Half of love is just being present. The other half is seconds.
Resurrection is the point. Everyone's been through something in the last year that felt like it buried them. Easter is the reminder that the story doesn't end at the low point. It's the most hopeful holiday on the calendar.
Call your mom. Or your grandmother. Or whoever raised you. Easter Sunday is one of those days where a phone call carries ten times its normal weight. Don't text. Call.
Kids remind you what wonder looks like. If you're around kids this weekend, watch them during an egg hunt. They sprint toward possibility with zero cynicism. At some point we stopped doing that. We should start again.
Dress up a little. There's something about putting on a nice outfit for no reason other than it's Sunday and you're grateful to be alive. Easter gives you permission to do that without it feeling forced.
Grace is a practice, not a moment. Easter is the biggest grace story ever told. But grace isn't just theological — it's choosing to be patient with your brother-in-law, forgiving the friend who ghosted, letting go of something you've been carrying too long.
Rest. Easter weekend is a long weekend for a lot of people. Don't fill every second of it. Sit on the porch. Read something. Take a nap after that second plate. You're allowed to just be still.
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OMAHA…
Football - What’s Happening in College Football
Alabama A-Day is next Saturday, April 11. Free admission, two-hour scrimmage, Bryant-Denny Stadium. The QB battle between Austin Mack and Keelon Russell is the main event. DeBoer says the team is healthy enough to actually scrimmage this year — unlike last spring's glorified practice. Circle it.
The Walk of Fame ceremony happens before A-Day — Ty Simpson, Parker Brailsford, Tim Keenan, and Deontae Lawson will have their handprints and footprints cemented at Denny Chimes. If you're in Tuscaloosa, get there by 11 AM.
Spring games are happening everywhere. Ohio State, Georgia, Texas, Oregon — every contender is on the practice field right now working out who starts in September. The programs that win spring are usually the ones that win October.
The transfer portal reshaped rosters again this offseason. Alabama added NC State WR Noah Rogers and USC DL Devan Thompkins, among others. Every team's depth chart looks different than it did in January. Spring practice is where it actually gets sorted out.
Zabien Brown is the best cornerback in college football that most casual fans haven't heard of yet. Watch him at A-Day. He's going to be a first-round pick next April, and this spring is where the buzz starts building nationally.
Gary Woodland just won the Houston Open by five strokes while battling a brain tumor diagnosis. Not football, but worth mentioning here because it's one of the best sports stories of the year. The man played with purpose. That's what competing looks like.
Easter Sunday and college football don't overlap often, but this is the one weekend a year where the sport is quiet enough to just be grateful for it. No games, no drama, no portal news. Just the anticipation of what's coming. Enjoy the silence — it won't last.
On the road again…
Travel - Traveling Without Going Anywhere this Easter
Host the meal outside. Drag the dining table onto the porch or the patio. String some lights if you've got them. Eating dinner outside on an April evening in the South hits different than eating it inside. The effort is minimal. The memory lasts.
Drive somewhere you've never been within 30 minutes of your house. There's a road, a park, a diner, or a church you've driven past a hundred times and never stopped at. Easter Sunday is the day to stop. You don't need a plane ticket to discover something new.
Take the long way home from wherever you're going. After Easter lunch at your parents' house or your friend's place, skip the highway. Take the back roads. Windows down, Charley Crockett on the speakers, no rush to get anywhere. That's travel.
Walk your neighborhood like a tourist. Leave your phone in your pocket. Look at the houses, the gardens, the sky. Notice things you've stopped noticing. Travel isn't always about distance — sometimes it's about paying attention to where you already are.
Plan something for next month. Easter is the perfect day to sit on the couch after dinner, pull up a map, and start dreaming about a trip. Book nothing. Just talk about it with someone you'd want to go with. The planning is half the joy.
Cook something from a place you want to visit. Want to go to Italy? Make a cacio e pepe. Dreaming about Japan? Try a simple ramen. The fastest way to travel is through your kitchen, and Easter gives you the time to actually do it.
Write a letter to someone far away. Not a text. A real letter, on real paper, with a stamp. Tell them you're thinking about them on Easter. The act of writing to someone in another place is its own kind of travel — you're sending a piece of where you are to where they are.
Take care of yourself…
Exercise - Outdoor Workouts to do this Easter Weekend
Ruck walk — throw 20–30 lbs in a backpack and walk 3–4 miles. You'll burn more calories than a jog, build your back and legs, and actually enjoy the weather. Easter morning ruck before brunch is elite.
Hill sprints — find the steepest hill in your neighborhood. Sprint up, walk down. Ten reps. Takes fifteen minutes. You'll feel it for three days. The resurrection of your cardiovascular system starts now.
Bodyweight circuit in the park — push-ups, air squats, walking lunges, plank holds. Four rounds, minimal rest. No equipment needed. Just a patch of grass and some willingness.
Trail run — if you're near any kind of trail system, ditch the treadmill and go run on dirt. The uneven terrain forces stabilizer muscles to work, and the scenery makes you forget you're exercising.
Outdoor yoga or stretching — spread a towel on the grass, spend 20 minutes stretching and breathing. After a big Easter meal, this is the gentlest way to move your body without hating yourself.
Bike ride — dust off the bike, pick a route, ride for an hour. It's low-impact, it's meditative, and it's one of the few workouts that doubles as transportation. Ride to brunch if you're feeling ambitious.
Basketball at the park — grab a friend, go shoot around, play some 1-on-1. No structure needed. Just movement, competition, and fresh air. The best workouts don't feel like workouts.
Take it easy…
That’s it for this week.
Keep showing up, be where your feet are, love your people - and as always, like Wooderson said…keep livin’ man, L-I-V-I-N
The Saturday Setlist Team
P.S.
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