What is the personality type of Jay Halstead? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Jay Halstead from Chicago Pd and what is the personality traits.
Jay Halstead personality type is INFP, so it’s natural to assume that he would fit into the INFP Myers-Briggs™ type. However, this is a mistake. Halstead’s primary Myers-Briggs™ type is ISFJ, not INFP. And ISFJs are not generally known to be “users” of other people’s feelings.
The real problem with this story is that it gave me a very inaccurate impression of Halstead as a person. In actuality, he was an extremely kind and compassionate person. He always had a sense of humor and was always willing to listen to someone’s story. He would often approach me and say, “Hey, I see you’re feeling down. How can I help?”
But Halstead was also an extremely angry and angry-at-the-world type of person. Whenever we were working on a project, Halstead would often take angry notes during meetings. And during those angry notes, Halstead would sometimes take the opportunity to pull me aside and say, “You know what? I actually think you’re an asshole.”
Jay Halstead is a fictional character on the NBC drama Chicago P.D., portrayed by Jesse Lee Soffer. Halstead is a detective with the Chicago Police Department's Intelligence Unit stationed at the 21st district. He was introduced on Chicago Fire as an undercover cop assigned to shadow and take down a local mobster-cum-thug who was harassing Gabriela Dawson, one of the owners of Molly's bar. He requests a transfer to the Intelligence Unit after the assignment ended with him getting shot but successfully arresting the mobster. Chicago P.D. begins a month following his transfer. Aside from the undercover assignment that served as a premise for his transfer to Intelligence, little is known about his early CPD career, except that he was already friends with Antonio Dawson prior to the transfer and that he had joined after serving in the military.