Entrepreneur and restaurateur Michael Chernow has built multiple businesses, but his real focus is on being present at home. From 5 a.m. breathwork to tech-free dinners, he’s redefining what balance looks like for the modern dad.


Location: New York City, NY
Kids: Two boys, ages 7 and 10
Follow Michael: @MichaelChernow


Who is Michael Chernow?

Michael Chernow is a New York City entrepreneur known not just for his businesses, but for how he shows up at home. While building brands and navigating the chaos of entrepreneurship, he’s raising two boys and intentionally shaping what modern fatherhood looks like.

“The most joy I experience in life is when I am with my boys. That’s when I’m most alive.”


The Hardest Part of Parenting

Michael’s answer is one every working parent will feel in their bones.

“Balancing work and family. I have managed my time like a ninja to ensure I don’t miss anything that matters.”

It’s not about being everywhere. It’s about being where it counts, and being all there when you are.


Best Advice for New Dads

“Having rituals with my sons has been something I will never let go of.”

Morning routines. Family dinners. Bedtime talks. Rituals aren’t just structure; they’re the scaffolding of connection. According to Michael, the magic lives in those repeatable moments that create safety, rhythm, and memories your kids will carry forever.


What a Typical Dad Day Looks Like

“I wake up at 5:15 a.m. I spend the first 45 minutes on breathwork and movement. Then I wake the boys up and make them breakfast. I walk them to school, go to work, and make sure we eat dinner together at the table, no phones. The day ends with a check-in and bedtime routine.”

Discipline and presence. No screens at the table. No shortcuts at bedtime. Just intentional energy in the moments that matter most.


Dad Life Non-Negotiable

“No phones at any tables, ever.”

Call it old school, but it’s the kind of boundary that builds real connection in a world obsessed with distraction.


Favorite Part of Fatherhood

“Hanging with my kids is when I feel the most joy. Simple as that.” Whether it’s playing, talking, or just being together, presence is the point.


What He Wishes He Knew Before Becoming a Dad

“You’re not always going to be right. Owning when you’re wrong is as powerful as showing up.”

That’s a masterclass in humility. Modern fatherhood isn’t about perfection; it’s about accountability, teachability, and being real.


When He’s Flying Solo

“Fitness is my thing. I love to train. I’ve also gotten super into archery. It helps me reset.”

Every dad needs a way to recharge outside of work and family. Find yours. Then show up better because of it.


Final Word

Michael Chernow reminds us that great dads aren’t just providers. They’re guides, anchors, and memory makers. His approach to rituals, presence, and intentional boundaries is a blueprint for dads trying to do life well.

You don’t have to be perfect. You just have to be present and consistent.

Jason Khalipa, CrossFit Games champ and founder of NCFIT, shares his blueprint for modern fatherhood. From garage workouts to family dinners, his philosophy is simple: win the day by showing up strong for the people who matter most.


Meet Jason Khalipa

From: San Jose, CA
Kids: Two (ages 11 and 14)
Gig: Founder of NCFIT gyms and digital fitness company

Jason Khalipa built an empire around grit, discipline, and sweat. But when his daughter was diagnosed with leukemia, he discovered a new kind of strength. The kind that shows up in the quiet moments, in hospital rooms, and in the daily grind of being a present dad.

“You only have one shot at this,” he says. “So make it count.”


The Hardest Part

“Just when you think you have it figured out, you don’t,” Jason says. Parenting, like training, is a constant evolution. You don’t hit one PR and call it done. You keep learning, adjusting, and showing up. “It’s a never-ending process of growth as a parent and husband.”

That humility—the willingness to keep learning—is the muscle most dads forget to train.


The Reward

“Watching life and experiences through their eyes,” Jason says.

He lights up when talking about his kids’ energy and curiosity. “They never let things be boring. Watching them grow into awesome young adults is the best part.”

Those everyday moments—game days, dinner talks, small wins—are what make the miles worth it.


The Wisdom

Jason’s advice hits like one of his workouts: direct, practical, no fluff.

“Read all the books, but realize there isn’t a book for your child. Take a regular check-in to ask yourself, ‘How am I doing?’ If you do that, the likelihood of waking up one day thinking you’ve done a terrible job parenting will be slim.”

And then there’s the line that stuck with him from one of the hardest nights of his life.

“The night my daughter got diagnosed with leukemia, the nurse told my wife and me, ‘Keep your date nights.’ Best advice we’ve ever received. If we aren’t locked in, we can’t show up our best for our kids.”

That’s the Khalipa code: protect your marriage, protect your family.


The Routine

Jason’s days are built with intention:

Before 6:30 a.m. – Garage workout from his Train Hard app.
Morning – Helps get the kids ready and shares school drop-off duties with his wife, Ashley.
Daytime – Creates content, records podcasts, and runs the business.
Midday – Shooting range or BJJ for a mental reset.
Evening – Sports with his son, dinner at 6 p.m., bed by 9.
Weekly – Date nights and weekend getaways with Ashley.

He sums it up simply: Family. Fitness. Business.


The Reset

“Working out,” Jason says. “It’s the best thing a dad can do to protect and provide for his family.” Physical strength isn’t about vanity for him. It’s about being capable—mentally and physically—for the people who depend on you.


The Hobbies

When he’s not coaching or creating, Jason’s all-in on adventure: shooting, BJJ, traveling, pickleball, golf, and exploring new restaurants with the family.

Follow him on Instagram at @jasonkhalipa

Sheboygan-based entrepreneur Tony Knapton is building two businesses, raising three kids, and still finding time for golf and movie nights. His approach to fatherhood is grounded, flexible, and full of perspective — a reminder that being a great dad isn’t about perfection, it’s about presence.


Location: Sheboygan, WI
Kids: Three (ages 6, 4, and 2)
Follow Tony: @tony__knapton


“Ever since having kids, I feel like time goes twice as fast. It’s already hard to balance all aspects of life, and then trying to stay as present as possible at the same time is a challenge.”

Tony Knapton is an entrepreneur, dad of three, and the force behind Radry Golf and White Dot Market. Between school drop-offs, meetings, and bedtime chaos, he’s learning how to build both a business and a legacy at home.


The Hardest Part of Parenting

For Tony, it’s all about time. “Not understanding where the time goes,” he says with a laugh. “Ever since having kids, I feel like time moves twice as fast.” Between running multiple businesses and raising three young kids, staying present is a constant challenge — but one he’s committed to tackling.


The Most Rewarding Part

Despite the chaos, the reward is clear. “Knowing how proud they are that I’m their dad is a pretty special feeling,” he says. That pride, from little voices and wide eyes, keeps him going when the calendar gets packed.


What He Wishes He Knew Before Becoming a Dad

“Everyone talks about the child,” Tony says, “but the dynamic change with your spouse is something I wish I was prepared for.” He’s learned that becoming parents means shifting priorities. “You’re no longer number one for a while, and that’s okay — just keep finding time for each other, no matter how small.”


The Perspective That Stuck

It wasn’t advice as much as perspective. “Empty nesters always say they’d give anything to have fingerprints on the windows and toys everywhere again,” Tony says. “I think about that often.” It’s a reminder that the mess and noise are the good parts — fleeting proof that this season is worth savoring.


A Typical Dad Day

Mornings start early. “We get the kids ready, drop the two older ones at school, and take the youngest to the sitter,” he says. Then it’s a quick gym session before diving into work. Midday means a kindergarten pickup and another sitter handoff before the afternoon sprint. By 4 p.m., it’s time for the round of pickups, dinner, and family wind-down.

“It’s a full day,” Tony laughs. “Who does pickups or mornings depends on who has meetings that day. A bedtime calendar sync with mom is crucial.”


Balancing It All

When it comes to balance, Tony’s honest. “I don’t, to be honest. One of the three is usually taking a back seat at any given time,” he says. “But I’m thankful for having my own business. The flexibility helps a ton.”

For him, fatherhood isn’t about mastering balance — it’s about learning to shift it gracefully.


Staying Grounded

Friday pizza and movie nights are sacred. “They’re pretty ironclad in the schedule,” he says. No meetings, no distractions, just the family and a couch full of kids. It’s the ritual that resets the week.


When He’s Flying Solo

Golf is Tony’s escape hatch. “It knocks a few things off the checklist — friends, nature, competition, exercise,” he says. “A great reset for my mental health.”

It’s his version of therapy, a quiet few hours that keep the rest of life in rhythm.


Final Word

Tony Knapton is proof that fatherhood and entrepreneurship can coexist. His version of balance isn’t perfect, but it’s real — full of love, flexibility, and a few good golf swings.

You can’t slow time down. But you can choose to be there while it’s flying by.

“You Are No Longer the Priority — They Are”

Location: Colorado
Gig: Offers programming for military and everyday gym goers
Kids: Three (ages 15, 13, and 1 month)
Dad Superpower: Showing up, no matter how full the plate

If you know Josh Bridges, you probably know him as the former Navy SEAL turned elite CrossFit athlete, or maybe as the guy who can outwork just about anyone. But if you ask him what role defines him most these days, he’ll tell you: dad.

Bridges has three kids — two teenagers and a newborn — which means he’s living every chapter of fatherhood at once. His mornings start early, because they always have. “Wake up, make breakfast, get them to school,” he says. “Come home, work out, get work done, then pick them up and get them to whatever sport they’re in. Come home, make dinner, get their workout in, then relax and watch some TV before bed.”

It’s a rhythm. It’s a grind. And it’s a choice.

When you’ve built your career on intensity, slowing down doesn’t come naturally. “The hardest part of parenting has been realizing you have to let them fail so they can learn,” Josh says. “Not being overbearing, but pushing them when they need it.” That balance — discipline without control, guidance without suffocation — is something he’s still refining.

But when he talks about his kids’ passions, his tone shifts. “Watching them grow and have passions of their own,” he says. “That’s the most rewarding part.”

It’s easy to see how his background bleeds into his parenting style. The SEAL mindset — attention to detail, structure, endurance — now applies to school drop-offs and youth sports. Yet, even in that structure, he’s learned to loosen his grip.

“Never wish them to be any other age than they are,” he says. “They’re that age once.”

That’s not something he picked up from a leadership manual. It’s a lesson earned in the daily, sometimes monotonous, always sacred reps of fatherhood.

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A post shared by Joshua Bridges (@bridgesj3)


Just Show Up

When Bridges first became a dad, he says he didn’t realize how much life would reorient around someone else. “You are no longer the priority,” he says. “They are.”

It’s a simple truth, but one that carries weight. His advice for other dads isn’t about optimizing time or hacking routines. It’s about presence. “Just show up,” he says. Whether that’s for school pick-up, a backyard catch, or just sitting in the living room while they talk about their day.

“I try to be present in whatever part of the day I’m in,” he adds, “and give it the attention it deserves.”

That kind of focus doesn’t come from a self-help book. It comes from reps — from treating each part of the day as a set that matters.


Golf, Grit, and Gratitude

When he does get a moment to himself, you’ll find Josh on the golf course or getting another workout in. Physical movement isn’t just habit; it’s his reset button.

He’s not a “favorite part” kind of guy, but when pressed, he admits there’s something special about watching his kids compete. “I wouldn’t say favorite,” he says, “but I really love watching their sports.”

And if there’s one thing he wishes he’d known before becoming a dad? “That time is a gift,” he says. “Never take any moment for granted.”

The message is simple, but it hits hard. For a man whose career revolved around pushing limits, fatherhood isn’t about performance — it’s about presence.

Josh Bridges isn’t trying to be the perfect dad. He’s just showing up, every single day. And maybe that’s the whole point.


Follow Josh: @bridgesj3

Editor’s Note: On a personal note, I’ve been following Josh’s Operation LFG programming for a while now — and it’s been awesome. If you’re looking for a no-nonsense training plan built by a dad who still walks the talk, this is it.

RAD DAD: Zach Neal

Former pro ballplayer turned GolfDads founder, learning that the real game is time well spent.

Location: Fort Worth, TX
Gig: GolfDads CEO & Private Pitching Instructor
Kids: Two (ages 4 years and 8 months)
Dad Superpower: Finding rhythm between structure and joy

“I’ve Surrendered to Father Time”

After a career in professional baseball, Zach Neal knows a thing or two about focus. But since hanging up his cleats, he’s found a new arena that tests him even more — fatherhood.

“The hardest part of being a parent,” Zach says, “is managing your time efficiently. I’m around my kids a lot throughout the day, so organizing my time effectively helps with that.”

He laughs when he thinks about the transition from no kids to one — then from one to two. “That second jump was a big one,” he says. “The lack of sleep hits you hard at first, but it goes by fast. You’re through the hardest part before you even realize it.”

Time is a recurring theme for Zach. It’s both the challenge and the reward. “They grow so fast,” he says. “Time starts to take on a whole new meaning. It’s become so much more valuable.”


Enjoy the Ride

If there’s one message he wants new dads to hear, it’s this: enjoy it while it’s happening.

“I’ve tried to slow time down,” he says. “There’s no way to do it. I’ve surrendered to Father Time and decided to just enjoy each day for what it is — knowing it’ll never come back.”

He pauses, thoughtful.

“They’ll never be as little as they were the day before. You’ve got to cherish the small moments.”

That sense of awareness runs through everything Zach does. Whether he’s packing GolfDads orders, giving a pitching lesson, or just making coffee with his 8-month-old before the house wakes up, there’s a rhythm — equal parts hustle and gratitude.


A Day in the Life

“A typical dad day for me is pretty special,” he says. “I usually wake up with my 8-month-old around six. We hang out, make coffee, throw on MLB Rundown or a golf tournament from the night before. Sometimes we go out for coffee at our favorite spot in Fort Worth. Then breakfast with the family, take my daughter to school, drop off packages, and get to work.”

After that, it’s work, workouts, and more family time. “Reading bedtime stories is always the best part of the day,” he says.

Organization, for Zach, isn’t optional — it’s the backbone of being present. “Writing things down helps me clear mental space,” he says. “Time management, discipline, and organization are how I balance it all.”


Golf, Grit, and Good Music

When it’s time to reset, he heads for the course. “If I don’t get to work out or sweat, it throws me off,” he says. “Golf’s more than just an escape — it’s a physical and mental challenge, time in nature, and one of the best resets there is.”

He’s also a man who appreciates a good vibe. “If I could do nothing but play golf, fly fish, and listen to music, I’d be all set,” he says. “Throw on some Dead or Sturgill Simpson, make a good steak, maybe drive my ’72 FJ40 Land Cruiser on a cool Texas day. That’s heaven.”


Love in Motion

What’s his favorite part about having kids? “The love and affection,” Zach says without hesitation. “Showing them new things, taking them new places, traveling together. Watching the world through their eyes.”

It’s that combination — drive, gratitude, and a sense of wonder — that defines him.

Zach Neal isn’t just teaching his kids how to play the game. He’s teaching them how to enjoy the ride.


Follow Zach: @_golf_dads | @zach_neal_

Rad Dad Feature: Wylie Robinson of Rumpl

If you’ve ever tossed a Rumpl blanket in the back of your car before a road trip or picnic, you’ve got Wylie Robinson to thank. The idea sparked during a van trip through the Sierras, when a busted heater and some duct tape led Wylie to ask:

“Why can’t outdoor blankets be as warm, durable, and technical as sleeping bags?”

From that moment, Rumpl was born. Fast forward a few years, and Wylie’s now running a brand that’s become a go-to for adventurers and backyard loungers alike. But even more important? He’s a dad to two young boys and fully immersed in the ride of fatherhood.

@schoonas

“Being a dad has redefined how I think about time.”

As the founder and CEO of Rumpl, Wylie’s days are full — but being a dad has shifted his priorities in a big way. “I’ve had to recalibrate how I think about productivity, creativity, and what actually matters,” he told us. “Sometimes the most meaningful part of my day is sitting on the floor building a LEGO tower.”

His favorite part of being a dad? “The chaos. And the clarity that comes from it.” Like many dads, Wylie’s learned that juggling business with family means something’s always in motion — but there’s something grounding in the mess.

On Balance and Solo Time

Wylie finds balance in nature — trail runs, sunrise surf sessions, or early morning time before the house wakes up. “Being outside clears my head and helps me show up better for my kids.” He’s also big on creating intentional one-on-one moments with each of his sons — even if it’s a quick bike ride or time tinkering in the garage.

Advice for New Dads

“Your kid doesn’t need a perfect dad. They need a present one.”

For Wylie, showing up consistently — even if imperfectly — is the whole point. Whether that means changing course mid-day to be home for dinner or just listening more than talking, his parenting approach is about presence over perfection.

Want to learn more?

Check out Wylie’s work over at Rumpl.com or follow their adventures on @gorumpl.

And if you’re a rad dad (or know one) building something cool — hit us up. We’re always looking for stories worth sharing.

Shaun Murray has been doing backflips off wakes since most of us were still trying to parallel park. Orlando local. Pro wakeboarder. YouTuber. Three-time girl dad.
The guy’s lived the kind of life teenage you would’ve doodled on a Trapper Keeper.

But here’s the twist: behind all the airtime and American Ninja Warrior backyard antics, Murray’s dad game is straight-up grounded. Practical. Thoughtful. And honestly? Pretty dang refreshing.


The Hard Stuff (AKA: Every Parent’s Tightrope)

Ask him the toughest part of parenting and he doesn’t talk about travel or work-life balance or raising teenagers.

He says this:

“Guiding kids toward making the right decisions and them continuing to like me while doing so.”

That’s the whole job, right? Lead them. Shape them. Nudge them. But don’t lose the relationship in the process.

Shaun’s figured out the rare middle lane—firm hand, open heart. And yes, some laughing in between, because that’s the part he calls the most rewarding.


The Best New-Dad Advice You’ve Never Heard

Most dads would say something like “sleep when the baby sleeps.”

Shaun? He hits you with a mic drop:

“Show up empty-handed.”

Literally.

When you get home, don’t carry bags, boxes, backpacks, or your whole day’s stress through the door. Leave it all in the car.

Now your hands are free—for your kids, for your partner, for the little moment you miss when you’re juggling Amazon returns and a laptop.

You can hug, scoop, wrestle, high-five. You can even invite them outside to help you carry stuff in. This is dad presence in its purest form. Zero cost. Massive ROI.


The Wisdom That Stuck

Shaun’s dad wasn’t dropping Instagram quotes before breakfast—but he did give him two gems that Shaun now passes to his girls:

  1. “You become who your friends are.”
    Simple. Brutal. True. And maybe the most important filter a kid can learn early.

  2. Write down the funny stuff.
    Kids are walking stand-up specials, and your brain will absolutely forget 99% of it. Shaun’s dad literally kept a book. Shaun keeps a note on his phone. You should too.


A Day in the Life of a Pro Wakeboard Dad

When he’s home, Shaun’s day looks like the ideal mix of discipline and play:

  • Up before 6. Coffee. A few pages of the Bible. Prayer.

  • 7:00 AM → Wake the kids, help with the morning scramble.

  • 8:00 AM → Office catch-up.

  • Rest of the day:

    • Shooting/editing content

    • Backyard ninja workouts (yes, he’s competed on the show four times)

    • Wakeboarding, foiling, trampoline sessions

    • House projects

    • Cooking on his new griddle (his words: “love it more than a grill”)

It’s a buffet of creativity, movement, and dad-ing—exactly the stuff kids remember.


The Good Stuff

Ask Shaun his favorite part of having kids?

“Getting on the boat together. And when they start driving me while wakeboarding—pretty epic.”

That’s a dad dream:
Your kids growing into the life you love, and then literally pulling you into it.

His non-negotiable?

Family trips.
No debating. No rescheduling. Load the car.


When He’s Flying Solo

The dude doesn’t slow down.

He’s either:

  • Playing guitar or piano

  • Running heavy machinery like an overgrown Tonka-truck fan

  • Or even messing with RC equipment like he did on the Sandbox Boys Podcast

If it moves, Shaun’s operating it.


A Few Things Every Dad Can Steal from Shaun

  • Show up empty-handed. The simplest “be present” hack we’ve ever heard.

  • Laugh with your kids. Not at them. With them. It builds something deep.

  • Curate their circle. Because who they run with becomes who they are.

  • Capture the moments. The funny stuff disappears if you don’t catch it.

  • Keep adventure normal. Your hobbies become their memories.

  • Take the trips. Don’t wait for the perfect time. It doesn’t exist.


The Dad Day Close

Shaun Murray proves something big: You can chase wild goals, build a career doing the thing you loved as a kid, run a household, raise three daughters—and still show up at the door with open hands.

Modern fatherhood isn’t about perfection. It’s about presence, momentum, and a little wake spray in the face along the way.

If you want more Murray in your life:
YouTube → @Shaun.Murray
Instagram → @shaunmurray