The set of Sidelined: The QB and Me was alive with buzzing crew members and camera gear clanking under the morning sun, but Noah Beck—now fully stepping into his role as Dreyton Lahey—was focused on something else entirely: breakfast with Siena Agudong, who would be playing the sharp, confident, and emotionally layered Dallas Bryan.
They had just finished costume fittings and blocking a few practice scenes the day before, but this morning wasn’t about football choreography or camera marks—it was about chemistry. Real, human, off-script chemistry.
The studio had suggested they spend time off set together to build rapport, but neither of them needed convincing. So there they were—tucked into a corner booth at a local café near the studio, coffee in hand and pancakes on the way.
“So, Dreyton Lahey, huh?” Siena teased, sipping her iced oat milk latte. “Star quarterback with a soft side?”
Noah smirked, “And Dallas Bryan—cheer captain who rolls her eyes at football boys. I think we’re already typecast.”
Siena laughed, leaning in a little, clearly already comfortable. “I read the script last night again. That scene where Dallas calls Dreyton out at the field after hours? That’s gonna hit hard.”
Noah nodded. “Same. I want it to feel real. Like… not cheesy. Like two people actually figuring each other out in chaos.”
By the time they walked out of the café, the nervous awkwardness had melted. On-screen or off, Dreyton and Dallas were starting to click.