Isabella Nice Gets a Dad Crush at Work
Report this video
Isabella Nice Gets a Dad Crush at Work drops you straight into the kind of office where the coffee machine’s always broken and the tension’s always turned up. Isabella Nice plays the new hire who’s trying to keep it professional, but when her boss—played by Jacob Coldwater—starts dropping hints that he’s got more than spreadsheets on his mind, all those good intentions go right out the window. Dad Crush knows how to build slow-burning heat, and here it’s all in the lingering glances, the accidental brushes, and the way Isabella’s pencil skirt keeps riding up every time she leans over the copier.
Ken Feels and Yumi Sin join the mix as coworkers who aren’t exactly helping matters. Worth noting, Ken’s got that smirk that says he knows exactly what’s going down, while Yumi’s flirty energy cranks the temperature up another notch. It’s not long before the office’s “open-door policy” takes on a whole new meaning, and Isabella’s finding out just how hard it is to focus when your boss keeps cornering you in the supply closet. The chemistry’s real, the pacing’s tight, and you’ll forget this is even scripted—it feels like catching coworkers in the act, except you’re the only one who gets to enjoy the full show.
Dad Crush doesn’t waste time with filler. From the first coffee spill to the last desk-clearing moment, every scene’s got a purpose: to get Isabella (and you) worked up. In practice, the dialogue’s sharp, the reactions are genuine, and the way Isabella melts under Jacob’s attention makes it clear she’s been waiting for this kind of distraction. There’s no drawn-out buildup—just the kind of relentless push-and-pull that leaves you as breathless as she’s by the time they finally lock the office door.
The production’s slick, with 4K visuals that make every flushed cheek and rolled-up sleeve look intentional. The sound design’s on point too—you’ll hear every whispered suggestion, every zipper, every sigh. It’s the kind of scene that sticks with you, the one you’ll replay when you’re supposed to be working. Because let’s be real: if your job looked like this, you’d be calling in “hard” every day too.