See Dad Run - Season 1 !!exclusive!! — Top-Rated

The series stars Scott Baio (famous for Happy Days and Joanie Loves Chachi ) as David Hobbs, the long-time star of a hit fictional TV drama called Daddy Home . In the show-within-a-show, David plays a wise, gentle, all-knowing father of three. In reality, David is a massive celebrity who has never changed a diaper or made a school lunch—because his wife, Amy (Alimi Ballard), a successful actress in her own right, has been the true "at-home" parent.

In See Dad Run - Season 1 , Baio plays David Hobbs, an actor who has spent the last decade playing the perfect father on a hit fictional TV show called See Daddy Run . For ten years, David has been a "TV dad"—solving problems in twenty-two minutes, dispensing sage advice, and always knowing the right thing to say. He has a nanny on set, a script in hand, and a studio audience cheering him on. See Dad Run - Season 1

Note: Some streaming versions have replaced the original theme song (performed by Scott Baio) with generic music due to rights issues—a minor loss for purists. The series stars Scott Baio (famous for Happy

The comedy springs from a classic "fish out of water" scenario. David knows how to play a father on TV, but he has no idea how to be one. Season 1 masterfully mines humor from his incompetence—burning mac and cheese, misplacing a child at the mall, treating a parent-teacher conference like an audition—while never losing sight of the show’s warm, beating heart. In See Dad Run - Season 1 ,

Feeling washed up, David auditions for a local community theater production of Death of a Salesman —and gets cast as the understudy for the understudy. The subplot with Emily building a school volcano that destroys the living room is a perfect parallel: both Hobbs are creating messy, volcanic disasters.

A rare episode focused on Janie. She’s humiliated when David accidentally packs a "special" brownie (no actual drugs—it’s Nick at Nite) in her lunch. The ensuing chaos at the school bake sale is a masterclass in sitcom misunderstanding.

“He played a perfect father. Now he’s learning the role for real.”