What is the personality type of Post-Britpop? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Post-Britpop from Music Genres and what is the personality traits.
Post-Britpop personality type is ISFP, which is the most common personality type in the UK.
I think it's not a coincidence that people are more drawn to him than a lot of American directors. He's definitely an artist, but he's also very European. He's not like an American filmmaker, someone with money and connections who can make anything. I think he has to do a lot of the work himself, and you have to have a certain amount of survival skills to do that.
—Fiona Apple
He's one of the few who would go to a film festival in the middle of winter to watch a movie because it's about a guy who has a heart attack, and it had nothing to do with the film. He saw it through the lens of a story, and that's what I like about him.
—James Franco
Madonna was a huge influence on me as the teen. I've never really heard an artist talk so nakedly, so openly, and so boldly about their emotions. She was a catalyst in my teenage angst, and still is. I've always idolized her.
—Nina Simone
I've read all sorts of things about David Bowie.
Post-Britpop is an alternative rock subgenre and is the period in the late 1990s and early 2000s, following Britpop, when the media were identifying a "new generation" or "second wave" of guitar bands influenced by acts like Oasis and Blur, but with less overt British concerns in their lyrics and making more use of American rock and indie influences, as well as experimental music. Bands in the post-Britpop era that had been established acts, but gained greater prominence after the decline of Britpop, such as Radiohead and the Verve, and new acts such as Travis, Stereophonics, Feeder, Toploader and particularly Coldplay, achieved much wider international success than most of the Britpop groups that had preceded them, and were some of the most commercially successful acts of the late 1990s and early 2000s.