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Monday, August 31, 2009

Harris New Release: Must Love Hellhounds


Must Love Hellhounds - September 1, 2009

A compilation of short stories by various authors, Must Love Hellhounds has a short story by Charlaine Harris about the Britlingens. Britlingens were introduced in All Together Dead of the Sookie Stackhouse series.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Friday morning jumpstart: Eric and Sookie .... forget Bill



This video is awesome! Great editing... changes the way things really happened on the show, but this clip makes it seem otherwise. Makes you ask "Bill who?" lol

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Swag: I like my Vampires Tall, Blonde, and Viking


Need FangFloss or perhaps SunScream? CW is cheesing up the Vamp swag

Is America vampired out? The CW network hopes not.
By STUART ELLIOTT | NYTimes.com

CW begins an ambitious campaign this week to promote a new series for the 2009-10 TV season, “The Vampire Diaries.” The campaign includes offbeat elements intended to attract attention, which include a blood drive, giveaways of mock products like “fang floss” and online games.

“The Vampire Diaries,” scheduled to make its debut on CW stations on Sept. 10, is tailored to appeal to the network’s target audience: younger women who dote on its shows like “One Tree Hill” and “Supernatural” and were fans of series like “Dawson’s Creek” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” which were from its predecessor, WB.

Perhaps the most unusual aspect of the promotions is the blood drive, sponsored with the American Red Cross. It is to take place on more than 230 high school and college campuses around the country, said Stephanie Millian, director for biomedical communications at the Red Cross in Washington.

Posters feature the three principal cast members of “The Vampire Diaries” — Paul Wesley, Nina Dobrev and Ian Somerhalder — sprawled languidly under this headline: “Starve a vampire. Donate blood.”

The Red Cross is working with CW “to produce a public service announcement that will feature members of the cast,” Ms. Millian said, and there will be commercials promoting the blood drive on the Channel One high school TV network owned by Alloy Inc.

The partnership is “an opportunity to engage the younger members of our communities,” she added, noting that Americans ages 16 to 22 represent “25 percent of our donors.”

“The Vampire Diaries” arrives as TV sets, movie theaters, Web sites and bookstores are awash in all things vampiric.

On television, there already are the HBO series “True Blood” and the BBC America series “Being Human.” The popular film “Twilight” is to get a sequel, “New Moon.” And online, the Web site Crunchyroll (crunchyroll.com) is starting to stream a vampire drama, “RH Plus,” from Japan.

To be sure, when it comes to the entertainment media jumping aboard bandwagons, too much is often never enough. But can CW executives be sure they are not overestimating the American public’s taste for blood?

“I don’t look at it as necessarily competing,” said Rick Haskins, executive vice president for marketing and brand strategy at CW, which is owned by the CBS Corporation and Time Warner. The HBO audience, for instance, is “very different” from CW’s, he added.

And while each of the “Twilight” movies is “a once-a-year mega-event,” Mr. Haskins said, “The Vampire Diaries” can be marketed as “a once-a-week event.”

“One is going to feed off the other,” he added, “no pun intended.”

(Giving Mr. Haskins a moment to get all the vampire wordplay out of his system, he also offered that the CW series is “going to be on Thirstdays.”)

Matt Diamond, chief executive at Alloy, which is a producer of “The Vampire Diaries,” said he was encouraged that CW executives were selling the series as “a good show that has vampires in it” rather than as a vampire-fest.

“We’re not naïve,” said Mr. Diamond, whose company publishes the “Vampire Diaries” books on which the series is based and is in business with CW on the “Gossip Girl” hit series. “If vampires become yesterday’s news, there will be an element of the show that will not be as popular.”

In the meantime, “in this demographic, you want to be hitting on what’s popular,” Mr. Diamond said. “It’s not always great to try to be the trendsetter if you want mass appeal.”

Steve Sternberg, a media analyst, said he believed that “The Vampire Diaries” had the best chance for success of all the new series arriving on CW for 2009-10, which also include an updated version of “Melrose Place” and “The Beautiful Life,” a show about young models.

“The Vampire Diaries” also lends itself to the “out-of-the-box promotions” that CW is planning, said Mr. Sternberg, who recently left his post as executive vice president for audience analysis at Magna, part of the Interpublic Group of Companies.



Among other elements of the campaign being developed by Mr. Haskins are trinkets to be distributed in cities like Chicago, Los Angeles and New York. They include packages of dental floss bearing the words “fang floss” as well as sunscreen for vampires, relabeled as “sunscream” with a V.P.F. — Vampire Protection Factor — of 1,000, because “sun damage is the No. 1 killer of the undead.”

The online game, called “Race Against the Dawn,” will be available on the Mochi Media Web site (mochimedia.com/games). And a “Vamp Yourself” online widget, or small application, enabling computer users to create and share with friends vampiric versions of photographs, will be on aol.com and the CW Web site (cwtv.com).

Although promotional commercials for “The Vampire Diaries” are now running on CW, the myriad efforts off the network are particularly important because CW viewership falls significantly during the summer when almost all its programs are reruns.

“Fewer people have the opportunity to see network promos on CW’s own air,” Mr. Sternberg, the media analyst, said.

And coming fall shows like “The Vampire Diaries” are getting less attention than usual in the entertainment media, he added, because of the considerable coverage for new summer series like “Project Runway” and “Mad Men.”

Perhaps the next big TV idea is “The Mad Men Diaries,” about vampires on Madison Avenue. Their competitive advantage: they work nights.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Eric Fans: Because this seriously would be our dream come true!



I love this scene. The music is tragic, the seduction, Eric no shirt on, sexy.

Charlaine Harris posts latest Connelly book preview


Over on CharlaineHarris.com, Ms. Harris has posted a sneak preview to her latest Harper Connelly book, Grave Secret. Click here to read chapter one.

Podcast: True Blood season 2 episode 10 - New World in My View

MaryAnn is building a tree of raw meat, Jason is a God, and Sam is still buzzing around. Brandi and Luz catch up on episode 10 of True Blood.

Get it on iTunes.

or follow this direct link to the podcast.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

True Blood's Ryan Kwanten (Jason) in GQ


Ryan Kwanten trades his Bon Temps football tee for a sexy photoshoot with GQ Magazine in a feature titled "ROUGH, TOUGH, AND RUGGED".

Click to see more *hot* photos of Kwanten and the article.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Charlaine Harris upcoming book signings, appearances, interviews

From CharlaineHarris.com

2009 Events

September 3 - 7: DragonCon - Atlanta, GA. - www.dragoncon.org

September 18: Mystery Matters web radio interview with Fran Stewart

October 14 - 18: Bouchercon - Indianapolis, IN - http://www.bouchercon2009.com

October 27: Barnes and Noble Shreveport, 6646 Youree Dr. Shreveport, LA; Book Signing 7 pm

October 30: Vampire Ball - New Orleans, LA; 9 pm - www.endlessnight.com/vampireball/

October 31: Garden District Book Shop, 2727 Prytania St. New Orleans, LA; Book Signing 1 pm - www.gardendistrictbookshop.com

November 1: Houston Chronicle Book and Author Dinner - Houston TX; 5pm - www.chron.com/content/chronicle/ae/books/bookandauthor/2k/index.html

November 12: Darragh Lecture - Central Arkansas Library System (CALS), 100 Rock Street, Little Rock, AR - http://www.cals.org/


2010

March 24 - 25: Lecture at Shippensburg University - Shippensburg PA - www.ship.edu

April 16 - 18: WRW writer’s retreat - Leesburg, Virginia - www.wrwdc.com

April 28- May 2: Romantic Times – Columbus OH - www.rtconvention.com

October 14 -17: Bouchercon – San Francisco, CA - www.bcon2010.com

Podcast: True Blood season 2 episodes 6-8 HOOKAH!

Brandi and Luz catch up on the last three episodes of True Blood, do a little comparison's with the book plots, and wondering what's to come!

on iTunes

direct link

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Cousin Hadley coming to True Blood

Lindsey Haun Joins the Cast of 'True Blood'
From BuddyTV.com

Lindsey Haun, singer and the former lead vocalist of hard rock band 7th Fall, has just landed herself a new TV gig. She's set to join the cast of True Blood for at least three episodes this season and will appear as Sookie's cousin Hadley.

At this point, there is no word yet on why cousin Hadley is being brought into the picture. But according to Haun, she's also filmed scenes with Stephen Moyer, Alexander Skarsgard, and Evan Rachel Wood so her debut on the HBO vampire series must be quite intriguing.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Sookie book 10 info and title!

From CharlaineHarris.com

Charlaine's personal blog:

"This has been a week of working, working, working as I try to bring DEAD IN THE FAMILY to a close. Lots of unexpected things happened, and I realized I have to cut a couple of characters I had big plans for, but I’ll save them for another book. It took me a while to realize what the theme of the book was, and when I realized it was about family – Eric’s, Sam’s, Sookie’s, Bill’s – suddenly everything became much easier."

I can't wait til May 2010!

True Blood 2.09 Preview "I will rise up"

True Blood 2.08 recap: "Luke is da bomb!"

Luke is da bomb!

True Blood 2.08: Timebomb

Jason, God saves! Especially from the paintball shots, but his future fertility may be in question. Sarah shares her distaste for all things Stackhouse… she must be moody because only 24 hrs ago she seemed to love every part of Jason Stackhouse.

Eric channels his inner hillbilly and wants to borrow a stake. Ah dang, Eric missed the BYOS (bring your own stake) memo.

Steve tells Sookie, (aka. the evil whore of Satan), the war has begun. You’re either with us, or against us… but if you decide you’re with us, you’re only a no-good fangbangin’ traitor and you’ll die strapped to a vamp when he meets the sun. Have a nice day.

Barry becomes Lorena’s dinner… but he’s a different vintage. She can’t quite put her finger on it. Bill doesn’t care much for plasma TVs. Maybe the TiVo forgot to record Buffy for him.

Jessica and Hoyt getting it on. Poor Jess, she’s doomed to be a virgin for eternity. Hoyt doesn’t seem to mind, but Jessica is uncomfortable with the sex. Eternity sucks.

Oh shit hooka! Lafayette is reading cards and spinning fortunes. Justice makes an appearance and spooks Lafayette into cleaning the grill. Eggs might be showing the early signs of Alhzeimers… but it must be in the water ‘cuz the whole town is blackin’ out.

HONESTY dude. Jason’s already been to heaven, but Steve doesn’t seem to understand which pearly gates Jason is talking about. I hope I don’t die and go to that heaven. Sarah’s not my style.

MaryAnne is cooking up something hearty. Its Hunter Soufflé and I don’t think you’ll be finding this recipe in any of Paula Deen’s cookbooks. Daphne joins us for dinner and Tara and Eggs just can’t get enough. of one another. knockin’ the shit out each other. Black saucer eyes!

Back at the Fellowship compound, Jason is mighty handy with the paintball gun and the Dallas vamps are here for an assist. All hell’s about to break loose and Stan looks hot in a Stetson. It’s Kumbaya time at the Fellowship lock-in with Godric wishing to mend fences and love thy neighbor nice-ities. Steve doesn’t like that song.

Uh oh, Sam is taking the heat for the Merlotte’s waitress curse. Its kinda like the King Tut curse only you die by the hand of a deranged killer. Bud wants to know why Sam has less credentials than an AKC registered Collie.


The lady in red seems to have recovered from her plasma TV gaping head wound and wants a meet and greet with Sookie. CAT FIGHT! SHENANIGANS! Sookie all but says “Bill IS MINE”. Lorena gets fangy and takes a verbal lashing from Godric. Look out.. Lorena’s mascara is running with her blood tears and Bill tells her to get lost.

Luke is a party crasher and he’s packing a message from Steve, the kind that kills the messenger.

Next time:
Time to be out of control with Tara and Eggs. Sam Merlotte is being summoned and the vamps are getting fangy.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Charlaine Harris entire Sookie Stackhouse series on NYTimes Bestseller Lists

Charlaine Harris’s Entire Sookie Stackhouse Series on the New York Times Bestseller Lists and Berkley/ NAL Owns 55% of the Mass Market Bestsellers for the Week of August 9th

From Penguin.com

Publishing phenomenon Charlaine Harris and her Sookie Stackhouse series once again feature prominently on the August 9th New York Times bestseller lists. All eight mass market paperbacks, plus the latest Ace hardcover, Dead and Gone, will appear on the lists that run in next week 's New York Times Book Review. This may be a publishing record with an entire series placing on the list simultaneously!

Charlaine is fresh off a sensational trip to last week's Comic-Con International in San Diego, where she met fans and signed a ton of books. About 800 fans started lining up on Friday morning in hopes of scoring one of 150 tickets to Charlaine's afternoon autographing session. The excitement continued on Saturday with another autographing session with the cast and creator of HBO’s hit television series “True Blood” (which is based on Harris’ novels) and a panel discussion about the show in front of 5,000 cheering fans. Charlaine answered several questions and thrilled everyone with the announcement of a new three book contract, promising that Sookie Stackhouse's adventures will continue into 2014!

Berkley/ NAL’s dominance of The New York Times mass market bestseller list in 2009 continues, as its titles snare 11 spots – 55% of the list! – for the week of August 9th. In addition to the eight Charlaine Harris titles to hit the mass market list, three more titles from the Berkley/ NAL group also hold strong: Tailspin by Catherine Coulter (Jove) is #3 in its third week; Moscow Rules by Daniel Silva (Signet) is #4 in its fourth week; and Hidden Currents by Christine Feehan (Jove) is #17 in its fourth week.

True Blood Season 2 available for pre-order at Amazon

Not sure when it'll be released, but I'm looking forward to it already!


Meet Evan Rachel Wood as True Blood's Queen Sophie Anne


'True Blood' first look: Evan Rachel Wood as Queen Sophie-Anne

by Michael Ausiello EW.com

When Even Rachel Wood makes her True Blood debut in the August 30 episode, there will be… well, obviously, blood.

“Nobody’s ever entirely happy to see her” character, Louisiana’s blood-sucker boss lady, Queen Sophie-Ann, says series creator Alan Ball. “She’s very powerful, capricious and most likely insane.”

Oooh, we love her already. So it’s a good thing she “has more than one secret agenda,” he teases, “which we will slowly become aware of over season 3.”

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Its True Love for "True Blood": Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer engaged

'True Blood' co-stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer engaged to be married

It's true love for "True Blood" co-stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer.

The real-life couple, who play lovers in the hit HBO vampire series, are engaged to be married, reps for both actors confimed to People.com.

Paquin, 27, will be playing stepmom to Moyer's two children – his 9-year-old son Billy and 7-year-old daughter Lilac – from a previous marriage.

Now with marriage in their future, fans of the co-stars can expect the chemistry on-screen to continue in the show's frequent nude scenes.

"Obviously, if you're already with that person then you're not having to sort of get over the 'Wow, I'm naked with someone that I don't even know the middle name of!'" said the actress.

As for Moyer, 39, his feelings are mutual: "My girl is hardcore."

Charlaine Harris: Unprecedented Nine Titles on NY Times Bestseller List simultaneously

Crimespree Magazine

BERKLEY GROUP AUTHOR CHARLAINE HARRIS'S ENTIRE SOOKIE STACKHOUSE SERIES HITS THE AUGUST 9th NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER LIST

An Unprecedented Nine Titles - Eight Paperbacks and One Hardcover -
On List Simultaneously

New York, NY (August 5, 2009) - Berkley Publishing Group author Charlaine Harris, the bestselling writer of the Sookie Stackhouse novels that are the basis for HBO's hit television show True Blood, makes an impressive showing on the August 9th, 2009 New York Times Bestseller List with each of the nine books in her series appearing on the list simultaneously.

Eight of the Sookie Stackhouse titles are currently available in paperback and will appear on this Sunday's mass market fiction bestseller list in the following positions:

" #5 Dead Until Dark (Ace Books, 2008)
" #6 From Dead to Worse (Ace Books, 2009)
" #8 Club Dead (Ace Books, 2003)
" #9 Living Dead in Dallas (Ace Books, 2002)
" #11 Dead to the World (Ace Books, 2005)
" #12 Dead as a Doornail (Ace Books, 2006)
" #13 Definitely Dead (Ace Books, 2007)
" #15 All Together Dead (Ace Books, 2008)

Dead and Gone (Ace Books, 2009), the ninth and most recent book in the series, will hold the #11 slot on this weekend's New York Times hardcover fiction bestseller list. The hardcover debuted at #1 on the May 24th bestseller list and has spent a total of 12 weeks (and counting) on the list.

This unprecedented showing comes on the heels of Harris's recent appearance at Comic-Con International in San Diego, CA where she met fans and signed hundreds of books. About 800 fans showed up in hopes of scoring one of 150 tickets to Charlaine's afternoon autographing session on July 24th. The excitement continued the next day when Harris participated in a panel discussion with the cast and creator of True Blood. Harris answered several fan questions and thrilled the audience of 5,000 with the announcement of a new three book contract, promising that Sookie Stackhouse's adventures will continue into 2014.

The Sookie Stackhouse series began in 2001 with the publication of Dead Until Dark. Not a traditional mystery, nor pure fantasy or romance, Dead Until Dark and its sequels broke genre boundaries to appeal to a wide audience of readers. Each subsequent book about the telepathic barmaid and friend to vampires, werewolves, and various other odd creatures, has drawn more readers. There are currently more than 10 million copies of the nine-book series in print in the U.S.- a number that is growing exponentially each week.

Charlaine Harris has been a published novelist for over twenty-five years. A native of the Mississippi Delta, she now lives in southern Arkansas with her husband and family. In addition to the Sookie Stackhouse series, Harris also wrote the Aurora Teagarden and Lily Bard mysteries and is currently working on the Harper Connolly mystery series.

Vampire Diaries vs. Twilight and True Blood Comparisons

'Vampire Diaries' team discusses those 'Twilight,' 'True Blood' comparisons
By Daniel Fienberg | HitFix.com

L.J. Smith's "The Vampire Diaries" was first published as a trilogy in 1991. That was a full decade before Charlaine Harris published the first book in her Sookie Stackhouse series and 14 years before Stephenie Meyer first begin making vampires sparkle in "Twilight."

However, because of the variable journeys from page-to-screen, "The Vampire Diaries" will be premiering on The CW this fall and on Tuesday (Aug. 4), the show's producers and cast had to explain to the Television Critics Association how this latest uber-swoony undead romance is different from the ones filmed before it.

[Publication chronology aside, it would be disingenuous to claim that just because its source preceded the sources for "True Blood" and "Twilight," "The Vampire Diaries" isn't utterly and completely indebted and beholden to those burgeoning franchises.]

With much of the cast off filming in Atlanta, stars Paul Wesley, Nina Dobrev and Katerina Graham, plus co-creators Kevin Williamson and Julie Plec faced the comparisons.

Wesley, who has previously played werewolves and fallen angels, got the first query, regarding the influence of Robert Pattinson when it comes to brooding teen vampire archetypes.

"Well, prior to shooting the pilot, I had never seen 'Twilight,'" Wesley noted. "And I specifically went out of my way to not watch 'Twilight' because I didn't want it to in any way influence me because I knew that it was a similar subject matter. And now, I've actually never watched the movie in its entirety, but I've seen parts of it. And, you know, I don't think that it would be wise for any actor to make any judgments on their character or decisions based on anyone else. I think if there are similarities to Robert Pattinson's character in 'Twilight,' so be it. I take the scripts that Kevin and Julie write, and I do my honest, best portrayal. And then anything else — any, like, similarities, that's sort of an aftereffect."

Lest you think Wesley is diminishing "Twilight," the "Everwood" and "24" and "Wolf Lake" veteran added, "I was impressed because it has this — not to make this about 'Twilight,' but it has this super sort of youthful following. And I found it pretty engaging, so I was kind of relatively surprised. You know what I mean? I didn't think — I thought it would be a lot campier. I actually liked it, what I saw."

Williamson, who created the temporarily oft-imitated "Dawson's Creek" for the old WB admitted that the basic similarities are unavoidable.

"The premise is the same: you know, girl meets vampire," he noted.

This gave him pause when he was originally brought the books.

"I worried a lot," he acknowledged to the assembled critics. "I was like, 'Oh, God, we're the ripoff. That's so great.' No one wants to do that. And I actually said, like, 'No way.' And then we read the books. And Julie and I wanted to work together on a project. Julie and I have worked together on and off since 'Scream.' So we wanted to work together on a project. 'Kyle XY' was coming to an end, and I was just sitting around... Just tweeting. And so I was like, 'Sure, let's do it.'"

Wiliamson urges a little patience before immediately pushing "Vampire Diaries" aside as a "Twilight" knockoff, especially after the pilot.

"The pilot was very tough because it does have a lot of similarities to 'Twilight,' and there's no way around it," he said. "We had to introduce — we had the story as he comes to town, the first day of school. That is the book. So we sort of are telling it in sort of that fashion, but we're switching things around. Once we get into it and we can establish all the characters, which is what — you know, the pilot, we had 10 characters to get out in 42 minutes. It's tough. And so now we can get — sort of sit back and start telling stories on a weekly bases. Then it all changes. That's when you'll see the differences, because you're watching a weekly show. We're not a movie with a beginning, middle, and end. We're actually evolving, and we get to evolve and just tell the stories, and it just sort of unrolls."

That unrolling includes a closer look at the impact of a vampire incursion on a small town, especially a small town that begins to realize that it's got a vampire problem.

That actually brings to mind more of a "True Blood" tie and Williamson admitted that at a recent Comic-Con party, he and Dobrev stalked (and met) Alexander Skarsgard of the HBO hit. [This reporter was witness to this meeting-of-the-vampire-minds.]

This led to a discussion of the enduring fascination with vampires, particularly for female audiences.

Dobrev began by stating, "There is something about a man who lurks in the dark."

Plec added, "It's, to me in my head, if Jordan Catalano was a vampire or Dylan McKay, that naughty-bad boy that just... you want to believe, like in reference to Jordan, you want to believe there is so much going on behind those eyes. You want to believe that they have epic amounts of knowledge and soul and spirituality and intelligence lurking behind those eyes. And in the real men, you often don't get that. So in a vampire, just by definition you are getting the bad boy with the brain."

Does that sound right, Fangbangers?

Anyway, right or wrong, I'll give Graham the last word when she declares, "It's not 'Twilight.' It's not 'True Blood.' It's 'The Vampire Diaries.' It's completely different, and you'll have to watch it

"The Vampire Diaries" will premiere on Thursday, September 10 on The CW.

Official poster for the upcoming Tru Blood & Gold vampire ball in New Orleans


More information: www.vampirelestatfanclub.com

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

True Blood set another record last Sunday

Bloody Hell: 'True Blood' Sets Another Record at HBO

The news just keeps getting better for HBO.
From TheWrap.com

Sunday's episode of the pay cable network's "True Blood" brought in 4.3 million viewers, according to Nielsen. That's a record tune-in for the two-year-old show, and a stunning stat given just how few home HBO reaches vs. other broadcast and cable networks.

Indeed, "True Blood's" viewer tally was higher than the premieres of some much- hyped network shows, including Fox's "More to Love" (4.0 million viewers) and ABC's "Defying Gravity" (3.6 million).

The news was also good for the other shows in HBO's Sunday lineup. Both "Hung" (3.4 million) and "Entourage" (3.2 million) had their second-best ratings of the season.

Sunday's numbers highlight the stunning summer pay cable networks have been having.

Monday, August 3, 2009

True Blood 2.08 Previews "Timebomb"

Ding Dong the Pig is Dead - True Blood 2.07 Release Me recap

Ding Dong the Pig is Dead
True Blood 2.07: Release Me
Recap
Wake the Dead Podcast | Brandi Hess

Sookie and Hugo are still holed up at the Fellowship compound and they’ve found board games! Good times are to be had by all! Only, Hugo is as nervous as a caged lion and he’s ready for a chit-chat with Steve. Steve would rather trace the family tree with Sookie. Uh oh, I guess Stackhouse isn’t very common ‘cause he figured out Jason and Sookie’s kinship. Man, talk about livin’ in a small town!

Meanwhile, back at the hotel, Lorena and Bill are flashing back again. It’s 1935 and Lorena brings Bill a sweet little apricot delight by way of a chorus girl. Bill doesn’t care much for desserts and sends his food away. Lorena hates waste and picks a fight with Bill. A few “you are mine” and “I will never love you’s” are passed around until Lorena gives up and releases Bill.

So why is she still here? They decided to stay up all night… er all day together and get a bad case of “The Bleeds”. I guess vampires need their beauty sleep too, otherwise you get blood running out of all your orifices. Barry drops by with a message for Bill, the walls are thin and the vamp hearing is turned up high because Eric runs to the rescue… of Godric.

Sarah and Jason are spending quality time in church, only I don’t think they’re there to worship. Well, maybe Sarah is, because she’s doing God’s work by cheating on her husband. IN HIS LIGHT!

Hoyt and Jessica are ready to turn in their purity rings to the sounds of Bleeding Love. Ahh, Hoyt’s just a cutie-patootie with his rose petals and blood-scented candles. I wonder if I could get blood-scented candles at Target. Maybe vamps can put them on their bridal registries!

Back in Bon Temps, all hell is breaking lose and Andy is still looking for PIG! Sam takes flight as an owl, and MaryAnne is none too pleased. She goes rabbit hunting and is thinking of a wonderful stew a la KARL! Ka-Ka-Ka KARL!

Arlene is afraid she slipped Terry the date rape drug, somebody got lucky even though she doesn’t remember. Lafayette meets Tara’s Eggs and compliments Satan with a damn fine hat. MMmmm and the new V Lafayette is sellin’ is going “faster than fritters at a fat farm”.

Sam meets up with Daphne at the local swimming hole. She’s been liberated by a maenad and thinks he should too. Sam doesn’t want any part of it, he’s packin’ heat. Daphne sticks around and waits for MaryAnne only to find black saucer eyes Eggs shoving a knife in her side. She’s done.

Back to the Fellowship compound, Steve and Gabe take Jason for a little ride in the car (Sopranos style) and dump him off to burn in hell at the hands of Gabe.

Sookie discovers Hugo’s the mole! He can update his resume to add fangbanger traitor to his list of recent jobs. Gabe comes back after being on the receiving end of a smackdown from Jason and tells Sookie he’s going to show her what’s she’s been missing from the human lover department. Godric shows up and we have a meet and greet.

Next up, a vampire militia led by Stan storm the Fellowship compound, Eric trades places with Godric, and MaryAnne tenderizes a heart.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Vampires: It's the new black

Who knew bloodsucking would be so marketable?

Talk about vamping it up – the stylish and sexy undead are hogging the culture spotlight

Johanna Schneller | The Globe and Mail

The undead sure are lively. Everywhere you look in entertainment these days you see vampires.

First there were the books, three different series of neck-biter novels, bestsellers all. The Vampire Diaries , the young-adult series by L.J. Smith (five have been published, with two more on the way), centre on a teenage girl named Elena who falls for a hot bloodsucker named Stefan.

The Sookie Stackhouse series (also known as the Southern Vampire series), written by Charlaine Harris, features Sookie, a cocktail waitress in steamy Bon Temps, La., and Bill Compton, the courtly, 173-year-old vampire who alternately protects and ravishes her. (On the July 10 New York Times paperback mass-market fiction list, Harris's books held seven of the top 25 spots.)

And Stephenie Meyer's monstrously successful Twilight series details the chaste but super-deep love between the mortal Bella and the vampire Edward, high-schoolers in drizzly Forks, Wash. Two graphic novels based on Twilight are due soon from Yen Press, drawn by Korean artist Young Kim and closely vetted by Meyer. And yet another trilogy of vampire novels, this one from the film director Guillermo del Toro, begins with The Strain , about Manhattan vampires run amok.

Then there are the TV shows. Starting Sept. 10, The Vampire Diaries will become a CW series, produced by Kevin Williamson ( Dawson's Creek ) and starring Nina Dobrev as Elena and Paul Wesley as Stefan. Over on HBO, True Blood , the kudzu-shrouded, plasma-soaked, 18A-rated series adapted from Harris's novels by Alan Ball (who also created Six Feet Under and wrote American Beauty ), is currently number one. With Oscar winner Anna Paquin as Sookie and her real-life fella Stephen Moyer as Bill, the show, now in its second season, lures 3.7-million viewers every Sunday night at 9; with repeat airings and downloads, the viewership jumps to more than 10 million. The ratings have risen 85 per cent since the series premiered last September, and more than a million season-one DVDs have been sold since their May release (Amazon is already taking pre-orders for season two).

Finally there are the movies. Last year's Twilight , directed by Catherine Hardwicke ( Lords of Dogtown ) with Kristen Stewart as Bella and Robert Pattinson as Edward, has grossed $382-million (U.S.) worldwide. Fans devour daily updates from the Australian set of its sequel, The Twilight Saga: New Moon , directed by Chris Weitz ( About a Boy ) and due out Nov. 20. (One recent hot flash: Edward and Bella kiss in it OMG)

Also released in 2008, the Swedish film Let the Right One In , about an adolescent vampire named Eli and the troubled kid, Oskar, who befriends her, was a cult favourite, ending up on a number of year-end best lists, including the Toronto Film Critics Association's. According to IMDB, it's getting an American remake courtesy of writer/director Matt Reeves ( Cloverfield ), along with a dumbed-down American title ( Let Me In ).

And rolling out across North America this summer is Thirst, from Korean horror-meister Chan-wook Park, in which the love between a priest and a married shopkeeper gets even more complicated when he turns her into a vampire. (To promote the film, Focus Features sent critics a hospital-style blood bag full of fruit juice, complete with a straw.)

So there was plenty of bloodlust on display at last week's ComicCon convention in San Diego, Calif., the annual geekfest that draws about 125,000 fans – and almost as many Hollywood marketers eager to garner their support. Weitz brought clips fresh from the set of New Moon , Harris signed Sookie novels for 150 pre-ticketed worshippers, and folks from The Vampire Diaries TV show and the Twilight graphic novel shilled their wares.

Why are we going batty for vampires? For one thing, these are not your grandparents' monsters. Creepy capes and heavy hair oil are out; today's blood-suckers are ethereally beautiful. In Twilight , Edward and his “family” are the coolest kids in school, with the sharpest clothes and the hottest cars. When they enter the cafeteria (in slow-mo, naturally), they stop traffic, and when sunlight accidentally hits them, their skin glitters as if they swallowed a disco ball. In True Blood , the vampires are sexy beasts, all smouldering looks, tattoos and tight black leather. (Their sheriff, Eric, recently tore a victim's limbs off while sporting high-lights foils in his blond hair.) So many mortals flock to the vampires' bar, Fangtasia, to mate with them that they've earned a nickname: Fang-Bangers.

Another reason vampires are so popular: Their habits can be adjusted to suit any audience. The PG-rated night-crawlers in Twilight and The Vampire Diaries experience passion without sex. The vampire boys clearly desire the mortal girls, but they're all about respect and restraint and withholding. Edward doesn't want to rip Bella's throat out, no, he wants to lie in a forest and hold her hand. He doesn't even kill people – he's a vegetarian (meaning, he only sucks the blood of animals).

On HBO, however, everyone's getting well and truly laid, with plenty of nudity, high-speed humping, and close-up blood slurping.

As well, vampire stories often surface during times of economic or societal gloom, because they play to our worst fears and secret yearnings. On one hand, they personify the idea of dark forces at work, chaos beyond our control, hushed-up conspiracies poised to destroy us. On the other, who better to fantasize about during a recession than decadent hipsters with mansions, flexible morals and a really swinging nightlife? They're haughty, selfish, excessive – all things we can no longer afford to be. In Blue Bloods , a young-adult book series launched in 2007 by Melissa de la Cruz, the vampires descend from establishment families and attend a posh private school on Manhattan's Upper East Side. Just as we suspected: The rich are ghouls

Today's vamps are also eternally youthful, with no surgery required, which is why the fashion world has embraced them, too – recent magazine spreads and ads brim with pale wraiths sporting red lips, black-rimmed eyes and killer stiletto booties. All of which means that we'll be living with vampires, if not for centuries, at least through summer 2010, when the third Twilight movie comes out.

When life sucks, Humans turn to the undead.

High blood pleasure

Vampires, zombies, the occult: Why such a sanguinary sell? When life is in tumult, pop-cult goes undead.

Pop culture is dripping, dripping, with the occult.

The book and movie of Twilight have become instant megahits, HBO's True Blood is one of the biggest shows on premium cable, and the novels of Charlaine Harris and Stephenie Meyer are haunting the bestseller lists.

Werewolves, then zombies, then vampires take turns as movie monster of the month. Left4Dead, a zombie-hunting video game, has sold more than 2.5 million units since it appeared last fall.

The supernatural is everywhere, and a wildly popular genre has been loosed from the vault: the supernatural or paranormal romance.

Why? Troubled times seem to raise the dead.

"The genre of fantasy is the ultimate escape," says vampire-series author Richelle Mead. "Vampires play off that. I have heard people speculate that with the economic downturn . . . these books . . . serve a need for some larger escape."

Or as Tony Allen-Mills put it in the Sunday Times of London: "The zombie has become the mascot of the global economic recession and a world shaken by terrorism."

Some think the paranormal surge began shortly after Sept. 11, 2001. Danny Boyle's zombie film 28 Days Later appeared in 2002. Dawn of the Dead arose in 2004, and George Romero's epic Land of the Dead in 2005. World War Z, a zombie apocalypse novel by Max Brooks, has sold more than 200,000 copies since it appeared in 2006.

Zombies have been used to question, satirize, or warn of the demise of contemporary culture. It's hard to watch Romero's classic Night of the Living Dead without seeing the angst of the Vietnam era. Vampire films often touch on divisive issues, such as AIDS in 1994's Interview With the Vampire and racism in 1995's Vampire in Brooklyn.

Since the earliest vampire films, such as the 1922 Nosferatu or 1931's iconic Dracula with Bela Lugosi, they've been studies of those who are different, those on the outside with no way in. Vampires, says Alan Ball, producer of True Blood, can be "a metaphor for any kind of misunderstood and feared minority that is struggling for equal rights in a society, which of course makes it very easy to use metaphors for gays and lesbians, bisexual [and] transgender people."

Or maybe the occult flowers as eras end. Katherine Ramsland, vampirologist and author of The Science of Vampires and The Blood Hunters, says, "I've been watching this trend for over 20 years, and I've seen that as a significant time period draws to a close - a decade, a century, a millennium - there is a surge of Gothic or supernatural focus. Vampire novels were also huge in the late 1980s and 1990s, and Dracula was published in 1897."

It's almost - eerie. In 1929 (oh, dark year!), William Seabrook's The Magic Island spurred the pulpy fiction and films about zombies. In 1989, the splatter-punk anthology Book of the Dead began a decade of offshoots and imitators. To stretch the rule a bit, the mother of all zombie flicks, Night of the Living Dead, appeared in 1968. The TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer aired from 1997 to 2003, nicely bracketing the turn of the millennium. And 2009 has seen the success of Seth Grahame-Smith's novel Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

"It may be partly due to a collective inarticulate sense of an era terminating," Ramsland says, poetically. "We defy the feeling of closure and death by dancing dangerously with it."

They don't call it "supernatural romance" for nothing. At the core of many vampire and zombie tales, there's a love story, either a human-human bond threatened by vamps, werefolk, demons, or zombies, or a forbidden love across the line between living and dead. (Think of Buffy Summers' bond with Spike.)

Mead, author of the young-adult Vampire Academy series (Blood Promise debuts this month), says, "The allure of the forbidden is what draws many people in, the romance between the immortal, sometimes dead, and always dangerous on one side, and the human on the other."

Maybe, as paranormal-romance novelist Marjorie M. Liu says, "it's the coming of age of people raised on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dark Shadows, and The X-Files." Or, as Mead says, "it's the Harry Potter generation growing up and wanting a more sophisticated, edgier kind of world."

Romance is the pulsating heart of the Twilight books by Stephenie Meyer, with the tortured love of Isabella Swan for the vampire Edward Cullen. Meyer patterns her books on classic romances: Twilight on Pride and Prejudice, New Moon on Romeo and Juliet, Eclipse on Wuthering Heights, and 2008's Breaking Dawn on The Merchant of Venice and A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Last year was Twilight's year. Breaking Dawn, the fourth novel in the quartet, sold 1.3 million copies its first day out. The 2005 book Twilight ended last year as the No. 1 bestseller, and the four books were 1 through 4 on USA Today's year-end list. The film of Twilight, released last fall, grossed more than $382 million in worldwide box office and $157 million in DVD sales to date. Its sequel, New Moon, will be released in November.

True Blood is modeled on Harris' Southern Vampire Mysteries. (The latest, Dead and Gone, debuted in May atop the New York Times hardcover list.) Season 1 followed the amour between telepathic waitress Sookie Stackhouse and vampire Bill Compton.

Liu, author of the Dirk & Steele and Hunter Kiss series, says supernatural romance "is about female empowerment. Shelters for abused women often distribute romance novels, and there's a reason for it. Heroines who kill demons and hunt vampires - they're tough chicks."

Bob Wietrak, director of merchandising at Barnes & Noble, calls the paranormal romance craze "phenomenal." Fully 16 percent of all romances Barnes & Noble sold last year were paranormal, and it's "even more this year."

Wietrak reports "an explosion of teen interest" as readers mature, stoked by TV and movie hits, which in turn are stoked by book sales. Fans read "fast, voraciously," he says. "One of our challenges is to keep finding new books and new authors to satisfy the market."

Bookstore, fan, author, and publisher Web sites link up in synergy, often producing explosive first-week sales: "There will be a huge surge when a title appears; we'll sell 20 to 25 percent of our eight-week sales the first few days," Wietrak says.

At first bite, zombies seem less romantic than the undying passion of vampires. But some of the most popular zombie films, such as the hilarious shock-mocker Shaun of the Dead, revolve around romance. And now we have the wacky success of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

The guy who had the idea is Jason Rekulak, editorial director of Quirk Books, in Philadelphia. Attracted to YouTube "mash-up" culture, he decided to combine two genres, one classic and the other pop-culture. On a sheet of paper he made a column of "public-domain titles we couldn't get sued for mashing up, like Moby-Dick, Huckleberry Finn, and Pride and Prejudice." In another column, he listed zombies, monsters, and figures from other horror genres. Then he drew lines between the columns.

"As soon as I drew the line between Pride and Prejudice and zombies," Rekulak says, "I knew we had a great title and a great idea." Grahame-Smith signed on as writer, and the rest has been crazy.

Unbeknownst to Rekulak, they were about to surf the wave. "We were worried at first that the Jane Austen readers wouldn't like the ultraviolent zombie mayhem, or that zombie readers wouldn't like the Jane Austen passages. Turns out they go together!

"We started with a literary joke we thought might work, and we ended up taking advantage of a boom right now in supernatural romance. After Twilight, we have the best-branded romance there is - everyone knows Pride and Prejudice!"

P&P&Z, out since only April, is in its 16th printing. A new mash-up titled Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, by Austen in "posthumous collaboration" with Ben H. Winters, is due in September.

Grahame-Smith, meantime, has signed a $575,000 contract with Time Warner to write - you guessed it - Abraham Lincoln: Zombie Hunter.

True Blood honored with "New Program" award by Television Critics Assoc.

TCA Awards hail 'True Blood' and (finally) 'Battlestar Galactica'

The Envelope, Awards Insider | LATimes.com

Wow! Members of the Television Critics Association actually put their awards where their big mouths are! Finally, the TCA Awards recognized "Battlestar Galactica" after voters beat the beans out of the Emmys for failing to give the show any major awards in the past.

Can this mean a break from the TCA Awards' hypocrisy? In years past, voters whined, fumed and harrumphed about the Emmys failing to recognize "The Wire" and "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," then they snubbed them too. TCA members never gave those shows real prizes — just handed them that bogus "Heritage Award" after they went off the air and failed to win best drama series or program of the year.

True blood tca awards news

"Battlestar Galactica" didn't win a significant TCA Award in the past and now finally reaped one after sailing off the airwaves, but at least it's fared better than other great TV series cruelly snubbed by TCA and the television academy. And while TCA voters skunked vampires back in Buffy's heyday, they did just hail HBO's walking dead by giving "True Blood" their prize as best new program. TV academy members recently drove a stake through "True Blood's" Emmy hopes by snubbing it in all top categories, including best drama actress, which was a major surprise considering Anna Paquin is a past Oscar winner ("The Piano") and Emmy nominee ("Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee").

But don't get too excited about the TCA Awards mending its old, bad kudos biases in a big way. As usual, women just got snubbed in the performance categories. This year, those awards went to Jim Parsons ("The Big Bang Theory") and Bryan Cranston ("Breaking Bad") at the expense of Tina Fey ("30 Rock") and Glenn Close ("Damages"), the only women nominated this year. That's typical.

Sometimes TCA kindly permits a token female to get an honorary career achievement award. This year, that lucky (and deserving) gal was Betty White.

Below, a full list of winners:

PROGRAM OF THE YEAR
"Battlestar Galactica"

NEW PROGRAM
"True Blood"

DRAMA SERIES
"Mad Men"

COMEDY SERIES
"The Big Bang Theory"

NEWS & INFORMATION
"The Alzheimer's Project"

CHILDREN'S PROGRAM
"Yo Gabba Gabba"

MOVIES, MINISERIES, SPECIALS
"Grey Gardens"

COMEDY INDIVIDUAL
Jim Parsons

DRAMA INDIVIDUAL
Bryan Cranston

HERITAGE AWARD
"E.R."

CAREER ACHIEVEMENT
Betty White

‘True Blood’ improves the drama and the sex

‘True Blood’ improves the drama and the sex
Aaron Barnhart, tvbarn@gmail.com

SAN DIEGO | Let the record show that Hollywood’s vampire obsession reached its inevitable point of convergence at the Comic-Con International show last weekend.

During a panel with the cast of HBO’s “True Blood,” a young woman in the audience asked the show’s producer, Alan Ball, if “we could expect a half-human, half-vampire baby on the show.”

To his everlasting credit, Ball looked like he didn’t know what she was talking about. Then the audience called out, “Twilight! Twilight!”

Someone on the dais explained to Ball that it was a reference to the popular teenage novels and movie adaptation. Ball nodded and leaned into the microphone.

“No,” he declared. Loud cheers followed.

Well, you can’t blame a girl for asking.

After a mostly blood-soaked first season, “True Blood’s” second season has provided the sexual release viewers were expecting all along. This, in turn, has raised the stakes for everybody involved in the fangbangers-in-the-bayou drama ... and made the show a lot more interesting.

Indeed, judging from all the nuttiness going on in Season 2, a hybrid Dracu-baby is one of the few options Ball seems to have ruled out.

I was asked, after the Emmy nominations were announced last month, why “True Blood” hadn’t picked up any major nods. “Because it didn’t deserve any,” was my answer. (Only Season 1 episodes were eligible for this year’s Emmy consideration.) Last year the blood flowed like water, and the story line moved like molasses. This season, at least, the drama and the plasma are keeping pace with each other.

Next year, I think “True Blood” has a legitimate shot at Emmys, although I must say I wasn’t encouraged by the sizzle reel that was brought down to San Diego to wow the 4,500 cheering fans packed into the ballroom for the “True Blood” session.

Before we get to that, though, here’s that part in my column where I take a moment to explain to readers why they should invest time in a convoluted TV series like “True Blood.” (This problem didn’t exist back in the days of Quinn Martin Productions.)

At its core, “True Blood” is a love story between Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin), who’s old enough to remember the movie “The Piano,” and a vampire, Bill Compton (Stephen Moyer), who is old enough to remember the first Steinway.

Sookie works at a roadside bar and grill, along with many of the show’s more colorful characters. Also, she is telepathic. (You’d think being able to hear the thoughts of everyone around her, she’d have picked another career besides waitress.) As you can imagine, that creates barriers of intimacy between herself and others. In fact, it took her a whole season and change to get it on with Bill.

Sadly for our heroine, Bill is caught up in a movement that’s larger than himself. That movement is both political and mystical. Political, in that vampires are demanding equal rights because the Japanese have developed a synthetic blood substitute that, in theory at least, allows blood-suckers to go legit.

Mystical, in that novelist Charlaine Harris has set her series of Stackhouse mysteries in the deep rural areas of Louisiana, where all manner of crazy stuff like shape-shifting and bodily possession takes place that they just don’t allow in those uptight, conservative big cities.

These literary decisions have helped the adaptation, “True Blood,” stand out in the suburbanized television landscape. For instance, the clever British series “Being Human,” now airing 8 p.m. Saturdays on BBC America, doesn’t seem as imaginative because with the sound down, it looks like just another program with three good-looking young city dwellers (who happen to be a ghost, a werewolf and a vampire).



There’s simply no room in these other series for some of “True Blood’s” more appealing characters. Take Lafayette (Nelsan Ellis), a drug-dealing, gay-prostituting short-order cook who got some of the biggest cheers from the Comic-Con crowd. I think some of his appeal comes from the comeuppance he has suffered at the hands of the local vampire sheriff, Eric Northman (Alexander Skarsgard). And I know what you’re thinking: How bad can a program be that has Alexander Skarsgard playing a local vampire sheriff?

Michelle Forbes has a juicy role as Maryann, a shape-shifting matron who lives in a mansion and is responsible for one of the pairings (besides Sookie and Bill) that has been steaming up the windows of Season 2.

That would be between Sookie’s best friend, Tara (Rutina Wesley), and handsome stranger Eggs (Mehcad Brooks). The preview reel that we saw suggests two things about their relationship: one, that they will continue to get it on, and two, that their eyes will turn a spooky shade of death. I’m not sure if one leads to the other — that’s why it’s a preview reel.

Finally, amid all of the blood-shedding (mostly non-synthetic) and clothes-shedding (ditto, from what I can tell), there is a subplot involving a holy-roller church of sorts, the Fellowship of the Sun. And here is where “True Blood” has the potential to lose me just as it was starting to reel me back in.

When “Six Feet Under” was on HBO, I was glad that Ball had the foresight to include Christianity as a major force in a TV drama about death and being gay. Ultimately, though, I decided it was of little use to anyone working on that show other than as a dramatic foil.

Sookie’s brother Jason (Ryan Kwanten) has gotten involved with the Fellowship, which believes that “God hates fangs.” This is an obvious reference to our friends from Topeka, once again putting them on the national stage and treating them as a much bigger deal than they are here.

From what I can tell, in the rest of this season’s episodes the church is going to launch a major offensive against Vampire Nation, and unlike the sheriff, they ain’t taking prisoners. In the clips, as in the episodes I’ve watched, the Fellowship of the Sun looks angry, maniacal, cartoonish and unlike any house of God I’ve ever been in.

We are not affiliated with Charlaine Harris or her publisher.