Vampires in Virginia: Difference between revisions

From AnOtherWiki, the free encyclopedia written by, for, and about the Otherkin community.
(Created page with "{{Infobox media |url=http://www.examiner.com/article/vampires-virginia |mediatype=New media article |releasedate=2011/01/27 |creator=Tom Howell |publisher=Examiner.com }} '''V...")
 
m (Text replacement - "{{b|}}" to "")
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
|publisher=Examiner.com
|publisher=Examiner.com
}}
}}
'''Vampires in Virginia''' is an article about a vampire movie being shot in the Richmond, Virginia area. It was written by [[Tom Howell]] for [[wikipedia:Examiner.com|Examiner.com]]. Though the movie is fictional, the article makes mention of real [[vampires]] interviewing retired police officer [[Don Rimer]] on the subject of occult crimes, Franklin County High School Student [[Christian LaPrad]] on vampire behavior among students, and Idaho State University sociologist [[D.J. Williams]] about self-identified vampires.
{{b|Vampires in Virginia}} is an article about a vampire movie being shot in the Richmond, Virginia area. It was written by [[Tom Howell]] for [[wikipedia:Examiner.com|Examiner.com]]. Though the movie is fictional, the article makes mention of real [[vampires]] interviewing retired police officer [[Don Rimer]] on the subject of occult crimes, Franklin County High School Student [[Christian LaPrad]] on vampire behavior among students, and Idaho State University sociologist [[D.J. Williams]] about self-identified vampires.

Latest revision as of 22:56, 13 September 2023

Vampires in Virginia
Media type New media article
Release date January 27, 2011
Creator Tom Howell
Publisher Examiner.com
URL http://www.examiner.com/article/vampires-virginia


Vampires in Virginia is an article about a vampire movie being shot in the Richmond, Virginia area. It was written by Tom Howell for Examiner.com. Though the movie is fictional, the article makes mention of real vampires interviewing retired police officer Don Rimer on the subject of occult crimes, Franklin County High School Student Christian LaPrad on vampire behavior among students, and Idaho State University sociologist D.J. Williams about self-identified vampires.