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    Boney M. - Rasputin Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Boney M. - Rasputin? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Boney M. - Rasputin from 1970s Music and what is the personality traits.

    Boney M. - Rasputin
    ENTP

    ENTP (3w4)

    Boney M. - Rasputin personality type is ENTP, so I would say this is pretty accurate.

    I do think the description is over the top, but I'm not really complaining. I can't say I disagree with anything in this description.

    Something else that I thought was really cool was the description of the fashion design side of the art design. I think the author did a fantastic job describing that.

    I think that, like all fashion designers, you can't be too picky about your materials, but you can want to experiment with different kinds of fashion. The author did a great job describing this.

    The only thing I would change is the description of the office intern. I would make it less specific to make it more generic, like say an office administrator or something like that. The description is good, but what I'm saying is that it needs to be more universal as opposed to specific.

    I feel like the description of the intern wasn't as great as some of the others, but it still had its qualities. It was still very unique and creative.

    I think the idea of the artist meeting someone new is a good one, but I don't know how well it would fit into a story.

    “Rasputin” is a song by Germany-based pop and Euro disco group Boney M. It was released on 28 August 1978 as the second single from their third studio album Nightflight to Venus (1978). Written by the group's creator Frank Farian, along with George Reyam and Fred Jay, it is a song about Grigori Rasputin, a friend and advisor of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and his family during the early 20th century. The song describes Rasputin as a playboy, mystical healer, and political manipulator.

    Although the song was written and performed in English, with single German and Russian words – "But the kasatschok he danced really wunderbar!" – it enjoyed great popularity in the Soviet Union, and is credited with reviving the fame of Rasputin there. The song was omitted, however, from the Soviet pressing of the album and Boney M. were barred from performing the song during their ten performances in Moscow in December 1978.

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