The first audition he ever went on, he got the part. That landed him a guest spot on Jessie at 12, and Nickelodeon came calling. By 14, he was Henry Hart in Henry Danger, the crime-fighting sidekick show that ran five seasons and became the top-rated show for kids 6-11 on Nickelodeon in its final year. He won the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Award for Favorite Male TV Star five years straight from 2017 to 2021. That kind of streak doesn't happen by accident, but it does make the next chapter harder.
At 25, he's navigating the transition every Nickelodeon star eventually faces: whether the audience that grew up with him will follow him elsewhere. The Henry Danger movie landed on Paramount+ in January 2025, giving the franchise a new platform. He's producing and directing for Danger Force, the spinoff, which shows he's less interested in staying on-screen than in controlling what ends up on-screen. Most child stars don't survive the jump from tween programming to something durable. He's still building his case.
Most of the industry told him he didn't have what it took. He had dyslexia, bad grades, and teachers who didn't hide their doubts. His father also had dyslexia and found his own path, which gave him enough cover to keep going. By 17, he'd co-founded Creator Edge Media, an influencer marketing agency, while still in the middle of Henry Danger's run. He opened a cafe in Corrales, New Mexico in 2023 and partnered with the UN on anti-bullying work. The picture that emerges is someone who decided early not to be defined by what he struggled with.