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Maybe all those episodes of HBO’s Sex And The City were a waste of time, as women were apparently looking for their knights in shiny armor in all the wrong places, like bars and libraries and they forgot to check this one place where you can find actual knights: the cemetery.
This new and possibly life-saving idea, for some women, came to a man with a rather dark sense of humor, Alan Ball, who also wrote the film "American Beauty" in 1999 and directed the TV series "Six Feet Under" from 2001 to 2005. So you’ve seen how death can be romantic, now take a look at the pleasures of life after death, or let’s just say something in between, like vampire love.
"True Blood", the new series of vampires premieres on September 7 on HBO starring Oscar winning actress Anna Paquin as Sookie Stackhouse, a young woman who is attracted to Bill, a 173-year old vampire who fought in the Civil war, portrayed by British actor Stephen Moyer.
The story is spiced-up more than you could imagine for a vampire drama also because of rising hottie Ryan Kwanten walking around half naked in a society so open minded that not only accepts different races, but also different degrees of decomposition.
One of the characters, Bill Compton, says while sipping his synthetic O negative cocktail: "Vampires can stand before a cross, or a Bible, or in a church, just as readily as any other creature of God." So they’re not afraid of going down the aisle. Let’s get them, girls!
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