Actress Ali Larter, best known today for her role in Paramount+’s Landman, recently looked back on one of her earliest and most infamous movie moments: the whipped cream bikini scene in 1999’s Varsity Blues.
In an interview with Entertainment Tonight, Larter was shown a clip of herself from 1999 discussing the nearly-nude scene (filmed with shaving cream). Her reaction was two-fold: first, she had to close her eyes, and then she acknowledged the scene’s unintended impact on her family.
“Really went after that kiss! Jeez. My son, my father, I’ve scarred them for a lifetime. My husband…” she joked, reflecting on the memorable moment that’s lingered in pop culture.
Larter’s early career included single-episode TV appearances on Suddenly Susan, Chicago Hope, and Dawson’s Creek, but 1999 marked her big-screen breakout with Varsity Blues, the remake of House On Haunted Hill, and Drive Me Crazy alongside Melissa Joan Hart and Adrian Grenier. She later became known for roles in Final Destination, Resident Evil, the hit TV show Heroes, and now as the lead in Landman.
When asked what advice she’d give her younger self, Larter emphasized finding calm amid the pressure of early Hollywood:
“Just breathe, baby. You know, this business is so hard when you’re kind of figuring out who you want to be as a young woman. I was very lucky actually, I feel, to be coming up in Hollywood at that time. It was a very exciting time in LA. But I look at it and I just think I was really hard on myself and nervous a lot, and I would tell her, like, ‘It’s all going to be okay, baby.’”
Even after 25 years, Varsity Blues remains iconic for millennials, not necessarily as a cinematic masterpiece, but as a cultural touchstone—complete with James Van Der Beek’s unforgettable line, “I don’t want your life!” and Ali Larter’s whipped cream scene that still sparks conversation today.

