vampire time
n. A schedule that involves hanging out in clubs, coffee shops, or other nocturnal establishments all night, and then sleeping all day.
Examples
2000
Ben Mezerich, for one, has turned his backward biorhythms into a way of life. He realized back in college that he functioned poorly during the day. So, upon graduation seven years ago, he became a fiction writer "because they can set their own hours." Under the pen name Holden Scott, he's had a good deal of success while working between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. every night. He's even turned down a few "real jobs" writing for a television series because he would have had to get up in the morning. "I do my best work at night," he says. "To change my schedule would mean I couldn't do my best work."

I'm far from ready to live on what Mr. Mezerich calls "vampire time," but I can't help noticing that I get a lot of work done in those silent, sleepless hours.
—Lisa Belkin, “Dept. of Yawn Control,” The New York Times, August 02, 2000
1998
There have been times lately, in the midst of all his good fortune, that Loston Harris II has paused to worry. For a young jazz pianist and budding crooner, these moments tend to occur on Vampire Time. That would be musician time. That would be late at night, when the rest of the world has been asleep for hours, or in the early afternoon, which is usually the bleary-eyed beginning of his day.
—Mary Battiata, “Playing for Keeps,” The Washington Post, June 14, 1998
1994 (earliest)
The real treat for locals who make a habit of taking their meals at all hours is the several locally owned and operated restaurants that cater to those living on vampire time.
—Rebecca Taylor, “Late-night eats,” Birmingham Post Herald, June 08, 1994
Filed Under