Draw a street caricature of the person in the attached photo, in the style of a fast, slightly mischievous 30-dollar tourist boardwalk sketch artist. White background. Bold, confident black pen lines, loose single-pass drawing style, imperfect, energetic, and full of personality.
Push the caricature much further into humorous satire: dramatically exaggerate the buzz-cut hair into a tiny sharp “CEO helmet” shape, enlarge the calm serious eyes into a suspiciously confident side-eye, make the nose and chin more prominent, round out the cheeks, sharpen the jaw, and turn the neutral expression into a smug, deadpan half-smile as if he just closed a business deal at a carnival booth.
Keep the likeness instantly recognizable from the attached photo: same face structure, short hair, eyes, nose, lips, skin tone, clean-shaven look, dark blazer, and white collared shirt. Make the portrait funny, cheeky, and over-the-top, but still charming and endearing — satirical, not cruel or ugly.
Use soft pastel shading lightly applied, with playful blush on the cheeks, subtle shiny highlights on the forehead and nose, and sketchy texture in the hair and blazer. The final result should feel like a talented street artist made everyone laugh by capturing the person’s “too serious for the boardwalk” expression perfectly. Carnival portrait booth energy, exaggerated head, compact body, expressive face, clean white background, no text, no watermark.
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