What's his type?
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What's his type?
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Last edited by suedehead; 03-10-2014 at 03:31 AM.
He seems more Si than Ni, imo. He doesn't really say anything especially abstract...it's all based on experience/tangible observations. He's just 'going with the flow'.
y'all niggas be trippen
"seeing the people react to the songs"
"what area of the song they react well to"
"before it was released, I hadn't left my city for literally 21 years"
"what young men think but will never say out loud"
"there's a certain order that almost haunts Tokyo"
"it helped me a create a world; it helped mold the concept for the album"
"Kissland symbolizes the outside world"
Last edited by Olduvai; 03-12-2014 at 08:52 PM.
I think all of the sociotypes have the 'do not choose ridiculously stupid names for themselves' clause, so he must be subhuman and below the sociotypes.
Si - dom 9w8.
Some sort of ethical type. I find him and all of his songs annoying.
SEI !!
sei
his new hair cut ![]()
enneagram 946/947
Michael Jackson vibes. So XEI, yes. The video is more
@May I spotted Kiko Mizuhara in there!! And she's SEE...
Starboy is IEI.
Always thought he might be an ESI.. I feel so much Se from him.. a reason why I am so attracted to his music. His music seems very sexual and emotional. He has got this darkness about him, that's why I thought he might be a 'feeler' thus Fi.
From what I know about SEIs in real life.. hell no he doesn't seem like one at all.. definitely Se valuer in my opinion. I as an IEI can relate to him a lot, but what he does with his art etc. (I often feel that way about artists and actors who apparently are ESI) is more in my head than me living it for real (even if I was a dude, I think haha).
Someone stated his lyrics are focused on tangible objects and yes I noticed that, too. I think an IEI would write song texts differently. His music is about gorey and sexual, sometimes romantic situations.. all of them very concrete. Put some dramatic tunes in there and 'romance' -> it does come across as deep and dark. But not thaaat abstract. That's why I think sensor might be right. ESI, was the one which would fit the most in my opinion. Ni is also higher within ESI than SEE, so that might be why there is a slight Ni vibe at times.
And wasn't Michael Jackson to be said ESI as well? Bruno Mars is inspired by him as well, but more in a happy way, while The Weeknd takes the 'darker' route (pretty sure Bruno is SEE, which makes him Gamma aggressor as well). I noticed people with the same type gravitate towards their kind a lot (I am inspired by quite a few IEIs and their way of life and work as well). SEEs also might feel a connection to their sister-type ESI.
But the imagery of his songs seem very Beta, indeed. Or at least very Se. No Si at all.
Oh but wait, ESIs have very high demonstrative Si.. that's why some people might feel an Si vibe coming from him.
You can feel a lot of Se in these videos (at least I do, lol):
Last edited by dot; 03-18-2017 at 10:03 AM.
Always thought of him as IEI; seems dreamy and a bit unfathomable with a love of wreaking havoc perhaps?
He's obviously an Se valuer, as well as an Fi valuer. He seems ISFj to me, and I've seen him typed that way a lot of times.
C-EII-INFj 4w3 Sx/sp 479
While Se in his videos is pretty clear, it looks more like an expression of how he is subjected to force or carried away by a frenzy instead of him as a direct user of it. Overall beta NF defiant bad boy/mad dog attitude is what I get from him.
ESI
I was super wrong, he's ESI 4W5 SX/SP
I think ESI fits well. Maybe IEI. Not SEI.
The Barnum or Forer effect is the tendency for people to judge that general, universally valid statements about personality are actually specific descriptions of their own personalities. A "universally valid" statement is one that is true of everyone—or, more likely, nearly everyone. It is not known why people tend to make such misjudgments, but the effect has been experimentally reproduced.
The psychologist Paul Meehl named this fallacy "the P.T. Barnum effect" because Barnum built his circus and dime museum on the principle of having something for everyone. It is also called "the Forer effect" after its discoverer, the psychologist Bertram R. Forer, who modestly dubbed it "the fallacy of personal validation".