Matt Lanter | Tumblr Yearbook
Matt Lanter joined @overchers to reminisce about one of the most memorable posters from the early 2000s, share his theoretical student government platform, and sign the yearbook’s crack.
Matt Lanter | Tumblr Yearbook
Matt Lanter joined @overchers to reminisce about one of the most memorable posters from the early 2000s, share his theoretical student government platform, and sign the yearbook’s crack.
Rhys Darby | Tumblr Yearbook
Rhys Darby sat down with @overchers to chat about the posters he had on the wall growing up, why he got detention, his favorite childhood meal, and Kiwi comedy.
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Matt Lanter | Tumblr Yearbook
Posters on your wall growing up: Jessica Simpson
Student government platform: No homework. Chew gum whenever you want. Pick your own GPA.
Freeze-frame epilogue: “And what is this all for?”
📸: Emeline Lotherington
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Ashley Eckstein | Tumblr Yearbook
Senior class vice president Ashley Eckstein sat down with yearbook committee member @overchers to reminisce about her teen-movie-worthy high school experience, being a theater kid, kindness, and following your passions.
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Vico Ortiz
Posters on your wall growing up: Star Wars and dragons. When I was a teenager, I actually drew flowers on my walls. I made a whole little flower bed around my room. It was really sweet.
Food fight food: Something that’s not going to turn me into a murderer. A banana, maybe, or a plantain.
High school fashion statement: I wasn’t big with fashion when I was in high school. When I was in high school, I was not really sure who I was. I was trying to figure out how do I fit in, and I was trying to follow like what I was supposed to look like or what was like society telling me. For the longest time, I kind of felt like things never really fit right. Things for either too tight or too loose. And it never really felt right. It wasn’t until my twenties and I was like, “Oh, okay, this feels like a bit more aligned with myself.” If you see photos of me in high school, there’s a lot of like baggy shirts and baggy jeans.
What would teenage Vico-Con include: A lot of dragons. A hyperfixation on swords and lightsabers. I actually had a journal that I doodled all the different types of lightsaber handles from all the different Star Wars characters, and then I could mash up the storylines. Star Wars, dragons, fairies, elves, and magic. I love magic. Magic in general. And swords, just like, sharp objects.
📸: Rob Douthat
Check out more of Vico’s interview, and the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Michelle Gomez | Tumblr Yearbook
Michelle Gomez looked back on fandoms and friendships from high school and committed to the bit during her yearbook committee interview with @overchers.
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Sean Gunn
First thing you remember being a fan of: Buck Rogers and Battlestar Galactica
Posters on your wall growing up: I definitely had the Fonz at some point. I also had a poster for the Steve Martin movie, Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid. I always had to share rooms with my older brothers, so I would I would have to defer to their posters, really more than anything.
How you rebelled: I would do things with my hair a lot, like shaved the sides and the back of my hair and then leave the top long or or shave weird stuff into it. And I used to wear I used to wear purple every single day for some reason.
Your high school experience as a film title: Why So Angry?
High school experience credit song:
Student government platform: Free stuff. I think actually, honestly, though, my platform would be, “Hey, let’s try to get along better with our rivals.” And then I’d get food and stuff thrown at me because I didn’t want to get into a fight with the school from across town.
Advice you’d write in your high school yearbook: Dude, chill out. Everything is going to be fine. Just. Just take it easy.
📸: Emeline Lotherington
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Zachary Levi
Poster on the wall growing up: Muggsy Bogues. He was a point guard for the Charlotte Hornets. I was a very small child and Muggsy Bogues was like a really small NBA player.
Teenage Zac-Con: Marvel mutant comics and anything associated with them. So X-Men, X-Force X Factor, New Mutants. Lots of Nintendo 64. I would bring a tote bag that had an N64 with at least Goldeneye and Mario Kart and four controllers with four rumble packs [to high school parties].
Theme song to high school experience:
📸: Rob Douthat
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Michelle Gomez
Poster on your wall growing up: The kids from Fame.
Teenage Michelle-Con: Probably something like New York Comic-Con. It would have been huge and ridiculous.
📸: Emeline Lotherington
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
Sarah-Nicole Robles
Posters on your wall growing up: Lord of the Rings. And a life size cardboard cutout of Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow.
Teenage Sarah-Nicole-Con: Folk, indie rock, or emo, depending on how far back we’re going. Pizza rolls and bagel bites, only served at temperatures that will scald you forever.
High school play moment: I played wall once. It was a haunted wall. I was a ghost wall and I had to hold a vase for 9 minutes.
📸: Rob Douthat
Check out the rest of the NYCC Yearbook, if you want!
tumblr heritage post productions presents: Inside Goncharov
We are humbled to kindly share an intimate look at the making of one of the most iconic films never made.
Join thespians Max Jenkins (Goncharov) and Caitlin Reilly (Andrey) as they clock in for a scene scripted by the legendary @canadian-finch.
This archival footage came to light during @netflix’s Dead Boy Detectives interview/seance. @overchers was also there.