Seven months after coming out in support of their female “One Tree Hill” co-stars’ sexual harassment allegations against showrunner Mark Schwahn, James Lafferty and Stephen Colletti said they are using what they learned to create a safe environment on their new show, “Everyone is Doing Great.”

“I think it was important for us as men to verbalize our support for the women that went through it, our cast mates and friends that went through it,” Lafferty, who played Nathan Scott on the series, told Page Six at the ATX TV Festival. “I think everyone knew it was the right thing to do, and then from there it was really about closing the ranks and talking about it privately, figuring out how to make sure that something like that doesn’t happen again on anyone’s watch. So those conversations were had and it was painful, awkward, horrible. It felt like three days was a month. It’s not what anybody really loves to talk about, but it happened and I think the important thing is that we stuck together through it … It makes the industry a safer place and we all feel that. It’s like this thing has been lifted and now we can all get to work together.”

Colletti, who played Chase Adams, added, “The good thing is that things are moving forward … I think the end of last year was important for society. We needed it. It’s given everyone an opportunity to take a moment, look in the mirror and say, ‘What have I been doing and can I be better?'”

Lafferty, 32, and Colletti, also 32, are raising funds via IndieGoGo to complete the first season of “Everyone is Doing Great,” which they co-wrote, directed and star in.

Looking forward, Lafferty says he and Colletti closely monitor who they bring onto their team.

“We’ve got a team of people who trust each other, that love to work together and have similar sensibilities in terms of the art they want to make and I think another thing that should be on that list that is always preserved and watched out for is that we’re all operating on the same moral landscape,” he told us. “It doesn’t take much in this world to find out what moral landscape someone is operating on. All you gotta do is either go to their social media or just talk to a few people who know them and that’s on us to do moving forward.”

Lafferty and Colletti’s new show follows two actors struggling to reclaim the spotlight five years after their successful run on a teen vampire show called “Eternal,” all the while trying not to let their past roles define them.

The pair tells us that while there are a few similarities between them and their characters, including the fact that they came from popular teen shows (both starring on “One Tree Hill,” and Colletti getting his start on “Laguna Beach”), it was important to make the characters distinct from their own personas.

When asked if he ever feels like he’s trying to shake his teen-show image, Lafferty told us, “From time to time I think so. There are certain casting directors who will tell your reps, ‘We’re not seeing any CW actors and that’s just it.’ That’s just the end of the conversation. So, in that regard, I think that it can work against you a bit, but I don’t ever feel like my identity and my career post-‘OTH’ has been really wrapped up in ‘OTH.'”

But Colletti went on to say that he carried MTV’s reality show “Laguna Beach” with him everywhere he went.

“I knew going into … rooms, you could feel it, going on to sets there’s just an energy where you’re defined by that show and I totally get it. I absolutely get it,” he told us. “It took years for me to feel confident in myself. Thankfully, a couple people gave me a shot and got to know me, not the guy that was on ‘Laguna Beach.’ I think from there as my confidence grew and as I got older I kind of left it in the past. I don’t regret anything that I did on ‘Laguna Beach.’ I would go back and do it all over again. It’s just for me finding confidence in feeling like I belong.”

Lafferty and Colletti have raised over $75,000 for their show with a month left on their campaign.