Vampire Association Sends Warning To Machine Gun Kelly & Megan Fox

Vampire Association Sends Warning To Machine Gun Kelly & Megan Fox
Original Photo Credits: Megan Fox - nicolas genin from Paris, France, CC BY-SA 2.0 (www.flickr.com/people/22785954@N08) | Machine Gun Kelly - Paulien Zomer, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Last November, actress Megan Fox revealed her engagement to Machine Gun Kelly. She also said that as part of the engagement, they drank each other’s blood. “In July of 2020 we sat under this banyan tree,” Fox posted on her Instagram. “We asked for magic. We were oblivious to the pain we would face together in such a short, frenetic period of time. Unaware of the work and sacrifices the relationship would require from us but intoxicated off of the love. And the karma. Somehow a year and a half later, having walked through hell together, and having laughed more than I ever imagined possible, he asked me to marry him. And just as in every lifetime before this one, and as in every lifetime that will follow it, I said yes. … and then we drank each other’s blood.” 

Now, the couple has received a warning from high-profile members of the vampire community — whatever that is. HotNewHipHop.com reported that Belfazaar Ashantison, co-founder of The New Orleans Vampire Association (NOVA), has told the couple to “take proper precautions before drinking their lover’s blood, including testing for potential diseases and blood-borne illnesses.” He clarified that vampires are “not immune from” these illnesses. According to its website, NOVA represents “the entire continuum of our Community ranging from those who view the vampyric state as a matter of energy, those for whom it is a matter of biology, spirituality, racial identity or bio-spirituality.” In a recent interview, Fox confirmed she wasn’t joking in her Instagram post. “It’s just a few drops, but yes, we do consume each other’s blood on occasion for ritual purposes only.”

Machine Gun Kelly recently told Kevan Kenny of Audacity that his next project will mark his return to rap after releasing two pop-punk/alternative albums. “I’m going to make a rap album for myself,” he said. “For no other reason, no point to prove, no chip on my shoulder… If I keep doing things to prove things to people, I’m going to, one, drive myself crazy and, two, not make a good product. I made ‘Tickets’ and ‘Mainstream Sellout’ because I wanted to make them. I need to now also make people miss that sound because ‘Tickets’ and ‘Mainstream Sellout’ are companion albums, I don’t think making a third that’s so [similar to those] is going to be exciting unless it’s missed.”

B.J. LISKO
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