This blog post covers Season 1, Episode 3, titled "Is My Very Nature That of a Devil?" Originally aired on October 9, 2022, this episode marks a pivotal shift as Louis de Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson) grapples with his dual identities as a Black man in Jim Crow-era New Orleans and a newborn predator under Lestat de Lioncourt’s (Sam Reid) chaotic tutelage. The "Animal" Diet and Moral Crisis
In a chilling reveal, Lestat admits he followed them to the woods and watched the entire encounter, fueled by a hypocrisy that allows his own affairs while begrudging Louis any emotional connection. The Breaking Point: Race and Retaliation Watch Interview With The Vampire S01E03 720p WE...
Driven to a "manic" state by starvation and the rejection of his family—his mother literally labels him "the devil"—Louis finally snaps. He viciously tortures Fenwick and hangs his mutilated body outside City Hall with a "Whites Only" sign. This act of "vampiric activism" triggers a massive white-supremacist riot that burns Storyville to the ground. Interview With the Vampire Recap: Bad Daddy - Vulture This blog post covers Season 1, Episode 3,
The domestic dynamic between the two becomes increasingly toxic: He viciously tortures Fenwick and hangs his mutilated
The episode opens in 1917 with Louis attempting to reclaim his humanity through a moral feeding code. He proposes preying only on the "morally corrupt," but the experiment fails when his conscience wavers. Instead, Louis resorts to a "diet" of animals—feeding on cats and rats—which leaves him physically weakened, irritable, and disconnected from his vampiric power. Lestat mocks this choice, famously comparing a non-killing vampire to a "fish that doesn't swim".