The Ballad Of Johnny "Cache" And Adventures Of Mr. Cowboy
2 min 56 sec read
We tend to think professionalism means sanding off anything playful. Be competent, be crisp, be neutral. Don’t be weird.
But “neutral” has a hidden tax. Over time, seriousness without relief doesn’t make a team noble—it makes them tired. So I’ve come to believe in a small heresy: you can do serious work and still choose a light persona as your way in. Humor and character aren’t a detour from the work; sometimes they’re what make the work survivable—and memorable.
Mr. Cowboy (and eventually Johnny “Cache”) began when I went to a friend’s cowboy-themed wedding in Montana—formal attire meets cowboy boots. I thought I nailed the outfit, and it felt good. A few months later, in the weirdness that was still 2020, I road-tripped through the Colorado Desert, and the cowboy look came in handy in those harsher, stranger landscapes.
Trying to reach the Salton Sea, I accidentally trespassed onto a date farm. While I was wandering the property, a date farmer pulled up in his truck. He looked every bit the cowboy and gave me a stern look. I got the message: I was on land where I didn’t belong. As I scrambled to leave, he fired several warning shots in my direction. I wasn’t hit, but being shot at is not an experience I recommend.
After the Salton Sea, I made my way to Salvation Mountain—brightly painted, otherworldly, and as surreal as its name. From there I continued west to Joshua Tree and then to Pioneertown, where a photo of me in full cowboy gear was taken.
My takeaway from that near-death moment with the date farmer was simple: take more risks, place more bets. I invested in crypto, bought GameStop stock, and interviewed at early-stage startups because I didn’t like my job. One of those companies was Notion. That’s how I discovered Next.js, which eventually led me to Vercel.
At Notion, when asked to share a fun fact on my first day, I mentioned being shot at by a date farmer while dressed like a cowboy. That sealed my reputation. The timing was perfect: every new hire at Notion got a hand-drawn profile picture in the company’s illustration style. My first version turned out poorly—it exaggerated my receding hairline—so I asked a friend to redraw it with a cowboy hat. That little tweak cemented my identity: I became the “cowboy guy” on Notion’s Slack. Over the years I leaned into the persona, sharing photos of my travels and stories of the Southwest. The cowboy hat became a fixture. Eventually I’d make Notion Faces with custom illustrated cowboy hats to spread more of that delight.
When I left Notion earlier this year, I thought I’d leave the cowboy behind. But when I interviewed at Vercel and saw I’d be meeting people named James Clements and Skully Skullface, I realized I had to meet someone named Skullface. On my first day at Vercel, I resurrected the cowboy persona—this time with a little more polish. My work at Vercel drifted toward a multi-month untangling of our CMS caching layer that proved to be a leviathan to slay. My teammate Logan suggested the very relevant rebrand to Johnny “Cache”. Get it. Caching, Cache, Johnny Cash. Anyway…
And, in a final twist, the cowboy I thought I’d retired has taken on a second life. Notion recently launched AI agents, and my once-deactivated cowboy profile has returned—as a cowboy-themed AI agent in a Notion workspace.
Mr. Cowboy began as an outfit choice and turned into a portable way to bring levity into rooms where everything mattered. That’s why I keep him around.
The work is serious. The people are serious. But the method doesn’t have to be. A persona—used lightly, repeated sparingly, and kept honest—can be a small act of care for your team and for yourself.