I'll Own That

Cody has been PM for three weeks — his dad made it official. A sun-drenched 70s yacht-rock portrait of absolute unfounded confidence, complete with roadmaps he owns, stakeholders he's aligned, and one bridge where, just for a moment, all he wants is for his dad to say the work is good.

I'll Own That
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Cody has a glass-walled office. He ordered the standing desk himself. He printed the org chart on the good printer — the one by the VP's suite — and taped it to the wall at exactly eye level. He has been PM for three weeks. He is absolutely killing it.
「I'll Own That」is the kind of song that would've played on AM radio in 1978 between a Steely Dan deep cut and an ad for a Pontiac. Sun-drenched Rhodes groove, chorus-glazed guitar, a bass line that walks with the unhurried confidence of someone who has never once been told no. The horns arrive in the chorus like a standing ovation Cody organized for himself. It's genuinely warm music about a genuinely oblivious person, and that tension is the whole point — you catch yourself nodding along to it before you've fully processed what he's saying.
The lyrics are Cody in full flight: circling back, aligning stakeholders, owning the roadmap, identifying synergies on what he describes as "a dozen yellow maps." Sarah from admin handled the meeting logistics. The Jira board got set up on a Tuesday and has not been opened since. These are not presented as failures. They are presented as evidence of delegation, which Cody has read about somewhere.
Then the bridge arrives, and the Rhodes drops to just itself. The horns go quiet. For eight bars Cody admits, without quite meaning to, that he sent the update and his dad didn't reply — and what he actually wants is two words. Just two. The deck looked clean. The meeting came through. So he snaps back. He'll own that. The outro swells into a full horn section repeat, background vocals layering in behind him, and Cody rides it out to the end like a man who has already forgotten the bridge happened.
The song is for anyone who's ever watched someone like Cody run a kickoff meeting and felt, simultaneously, a faint pity and a grudging admiration for the sheer structural integrity of the confidence.

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