I Found a Penny Today, So Here’s a Thought |



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What if a vampire ...
- on one drop of blood could linger for thousands of years?
- discovered his lover wasn't another nosferatu but was instead (shudder) a human
- had a conscience?
- used a lost dog to lure victims?
- could feed on pure emotion?
- has silver fillings in his teeth?
- faces the choice of turning someone or letting him die right then and there?
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underwent psychoanalysis?
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felt remorse for his actions?
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moved in next door?
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wants to send his grandmother a photograph, but he is invisible in each picture?
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thinks he's a werewolf?
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does escape his old sect?
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became involved with artificial blood research?
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needed to travel quickly from New York to Los Angeles?
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is already among us?
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tried to hold on to the light?
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.] See Bullet Lists.
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"And despair and further confusion." From Dark Shadows episode 248.
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Mixing vampire humor and 1970s tropes (like pet rocks, lava lamps, disco music, bell-bottom pants, mirror balls, and of course mood rings), the web series Grave Mood Rings pokes fast fun at classic slow-moving Gothic soap operas like Dark Shadows and the Canadian series Strange Paradise. In addition to a vampiric Viscount, a castle is home to a groovy Doctor (a phlebotomist, naturally), a jolly housekeeper with her own laugh track, a werewolf Vicar, and an arch-nemesis riddler wearing a Sphinx mask. Corny wordplay, the occasional bizarre sing-a-long, and haunted doughnuts punctuate the proceedings, in the tradition of the sketch comedy of MadTV, Kids in the Hall, and SCTV.
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From Flying Saucer News, 1958.
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"How long is the road to Perfection? What must we go through in life to reach our goal, whatever it is? And by what means can we lose our way?" From Mystic Magazine, 1954.
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Mixing vampire humor and 1970s tropes (like pet rocks, lava lamps, disco music, bell-bottom pants, mirror balls, and of course mood rings), the web series Grave Mood Rings pokes fast fun at classic slow-moving Gothic soap operas like Dark Shadows and the Canadian series Strange Paradise. In addition to a vampiric Viscount, a castle is home to a groovy Doctor (a phlebotomist, naturally), a jolly housekeeper with her own laugh track, a werewolf Vicar, and an arch-nemesis riddler wearing a Sphinx mask. Corny wordplay, the occasional bizarre sing-a-long, and haunted doughnuts punctuate the proceedings, in the tradition of the sketch comedy of MadTV, Kids in the Hall, and SCTV.
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From the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' Our Dumb Animals magazine, 1955.
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Mixing vampire humor and 1970s tropes (like pet rocks, lava lamps, disco music, bell-bottom pants, mirror balls, and of course mood rings), the web series Grave Mood Rings pokes fast fun at classic slow-moving Gothic soap operas like Dark Shadows and the Canadian series Strange Paradise. In addition to a vampiric Viscount, a castle is home to a groovy Doctor (a phlebotomist, naturally), a jolly housekeeper with her own laugh track, a werewolf Vicar, and an arch-nemesis riddler wearing a Sphinx mask. Corny wordplay, the occasional bizarre sing-a-long, and haunted doughnuts punctuate the proceedings, in the tradition of the sketch comedy of MadTV, Kids in the Hall, and SCTV.
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Original Content Copyright © 2025 by Craig Conley. All rights reserved.
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