Comedian Bo Burnham
Comedian Bo Burnham
Ne base, could see both IEE and ILE work for him; Ne subtype if we use the subtype system. I don't like stand up comedy but he is one of the few I can stomach because it's all distilled in a musical form.
I don't like his movies though.
“I want the following word: splendor, splendor is fruit in all its succulence, fruit without sadness. I want vast distances. My savage intuition of myself.”
― Clarice Lispector
Seems IEI to me.
I see IEE.
I'd say T. gamma or alpha NT or LSI.
I hate stand up and can't understand how someone enjoy doing it.
SEI-Fe (3w4 sp/so) with an EIE subtype, and likely a Creative subtype by DCNH. This interplay of different personas is so much e3 Fe ego:
Type 5 on the Enneagram.
I'll go with LII-Ne for him.
Sicuramente cercherai il significato di questo.
Bump.
Sicuramente cercherai il significato di questo.
Literally who?
SLE-Ti>ILE-Ti, reminds me of DJ Arendee, very similar way of talking and expressions, slightly more J-ish though, more interactive/energetic than deep/self-focused in comparison (boosted Fe/Te vs boosted Ni?).
Yours is a good guess. I forgot I’d put Burnham up here to type and yesterday my Youtube shuffled to an old video (not oficial vid) of The Bangles. I was struck by how Debbi Peterson’s way of carrying herself and set of expressions matched his.
And she looks like Bo in a wig.
Sicuramente cercherai il significato di questo.
I looked this up because one of my friend's sister memorized all of his songs. I listened to two of them and I could not imagine what I should be laughing at.
I do not like his humor and I find him annoying. They also said that he reminds them of me. IDK about that.
He seems like an IEE to me like Steve Martin.
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".
LIE