911³Ō¹Ļ

Brandon Lazenko, ’16

 

Brandon Lazenko, ’16

Brandon Lazenko, ’16, brings Stephen King short story to life on the big screen.

Brandon Lazenko, ’16, found a way to provide an unusual opportunity for 911³Ō¹Ļ film students to learn outside of the classroom through his upcoming project, He and fellow 911³Ō¹Ļ graduate Shelby Wyant, ’18, wrote the 40-minute film adapted from Stephen King’s short story ā€œNona.ā€ The alumni pair got permission to create their adaptation of the short story from King and his team through his ā€œOctober Rosesā€ follows a down-on-his-luck professor who meets a beautiful woman while hitchhiking around Maine. He gets wrapped up in her web and makes decisions he normally wouldn’t make. His team for the film includes 911³Ō¹Ļ students who are helping on set, horror special effects icon Robert Kurtzman and his wife Marcy King who are both Ohio natives. However, Brandon’s experience in film didn’t begin with ā€œOctober Roses.ā€ He’s also created two miniseries and four short films, including the award winning

KSU: What is your idea of perfect happiness?
BL: Happiness to me is synonymous with comfort.

KSU: What is your favorite trait in others?
BL: Being open minded and willing to say, "Hey, let's do it and see what happens…"

KSU: What trait about yourself do you like least?
BL: I feel like this is one of those interview questions where I'm supposed to make a strength sound like a weakness. But I'll answer it at face value. I sometimes catch myself complying rather than questioning due to a fear of confrontation. This is something I'm actively working on as I grow as a leader.

KSU: Who has had the greatest influence on your life?
BL: Anyone whom I've seen take risks and make sacrifices.

KSU: What is your favorite 911³Ō¹Ļ memory?
BL: I was a campus tour guide when I met Shelby Wyant, my Soup Snake and my role model.

KSU: What is your favorite journey?
BL: Assuming anyone's favorite journey would be their most difficult to overcome. For me, it was my educational journey. I was diagnosed with learning disabilities and placed in special education programming in third grade. After a lifetime of adversity and a seven-year climb to earn my KSU bachelor's degree, I can look back and appreciate the personal growth I experienced along the way.

KSU: What is your guilty pleasure?
BL: Battlebots. When people ask me if I watch sports, I can confidently tell them yes. Team Hydra!

KSU: What do you consider your greatest achievement?
BL: This is a hard question for most people to answer confidently, and I fall into that majority. So, in this moment, as I try to recollect my entire life, I feel that my greatest achievements are the relationships I've built with the at-risk and underserved youth in our communities.

KSU: If you could come back as one person, who would it be and why?
BL: Probably Jack Black. I self-identify as socially awkward, and I envy his ability to be unapologetically himself at all times of the day.

KSU: What part of your college experience most formed who you are today?
BL: The people I met in the back half of my seven-year undergraduate experience are the people who hold me accountable and offer unconditional support. Those relationships are what keep me motivated.

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POSTED: Monday, October 3, 2022 09:49 AM
UPDATED: Friday, March 06, 2026 03:05 PM