You have a lot going for you, but agree with others that you have nearly all high reaches on your list. Of your reaches, Penn, Chicago, Georgetown, NYU Stern, Northwestern, Berkeley, Notre Dame and Michigan are pretty unlikely, even if you ED. I think it’s possible that BC or Emory could be just a regular reach (as opposed to a high reach), but only if you’re willing to apply ED - applying to either in the regular rounds will make them both pretty high reaches as well. If you would be totally fine with Indiana or Penn State, then this list is possibly OK, except you will be really struggling to do justice to those 10 applications for your reach schools. I would recommend drastically paring down your reaches, and adding in a lot of targets. You already have two pretty good liklies/safeties.
It’s very hard to tell from this list what it is you’re seeking other than prestigious schools. You have a mix of medium-sized and very large schools, a mix of big city and more small college town schools, some schools with large beautiful campuses and others that are urban with not much of a campus feel. Some schools here have Greek life and a big sports culture, others not. Some are Catholic and others secular. Plus you have schools that are geographically spread out all over the place. I would spend some time visiting campuses and really thinking through what characteristics you’re seeking beyond prestige/ranking. Most students, once they spend some time at a few campuses and start investigating, realize that they 1) have some strong preferences, whether it’s as to size, type of campus, proximity to a city, Greek life, etc, and 2) realize that there are quite a few schools that have those preferred qualities that aren’t big reach schools.
Some schools you may want to consider that have some features in common with some of the ones of you list, but which might be lower reaches or targets: Fordham, University of Denver, Loyola Marymount, American University, George Washington, Case Western. Bear in mind that some of these schools (American and Case Western in particular) highly prioritize demonstrated interested, so you’ll need to show them a lot of love in the application cycle to avoid getting waitlisted.