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      • Sexy, strong, dangerous and immortal, it seems that vampires have acquired another quality: lucrative. Looking at the various industries that benefit from the genre, 24/7 Wall St. estimates that vampires contributed nearly $10 billion to the economy in modern times.
      www.aol.com/news/2011-11-17-blood-money-why-vampires-are-worth-10-billion-to-our-economy.html
  1. Nov 15, 2021 · Why are vampires always wealthy in movies? Like how do they make a living lmao. — 🥣 (@pholanthropist) November 13, 2021. God, I love it when Twitter gets like this. Let’s analyze the...

  2. A vampire in the middle ages could easily become a lord simply through military might. With lands the vamp could simply collect taxes and rent to become wealthy. Renaissance or colonial era could do something similar.

  3. Armand spends some time stealing art from drug lords and raiding sunken ships for coins and relics. In the books they all spend time in rags, they all spend time fabulously wealthy. It comes and goes just like for humans.

  4. Nov 17, 2011 · 1. Movies. Gross Vampire Product: $5 billion. Long before the Twilight series, vampire movies have been popular. Various Dracula movies, the Blade series, and the hugely popular 1994's...

  5. In 1819, a physician named John Polidori revamped the supernatural beings' image, basing his wealthy, debonair Lord Ruthven in "The Vampyre" on the romantic poet Lord Byron. A suave monster ...

    • Jenny Mcgrath
    • Henry Blodget
  6. Nov 30, 2009 · Though the "original" vampires are long since gone, their legacy remains and vampires continue to fascinate the world. It seems likely that neither science nor wooden stakes will ever...

  7. Oct 27, 2022 · Bela Lugosi’s “Dracula” set the bar for all other vampire movies. The black-and-white movie established Dracula as a wealthy, debonair vampire whose immortal kiss is desirable instead of deadly. For the most part, it’s how many people perceive vampires today.