What is the personality type of Mick Philpott? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Mick Philpott from Criminals and what is the personality traits.
Mick Philpott personality type is ENFJ, which stands for the Myers-Briggs personality type. Although this is a very rare personality type it is also a very common one, which is why I have listed it at the end of the article.
ENFJs are very warm and charismatic people, who have a natural tendency to be leaders. They have a very strong drive to be in charge and they enjoy being in positions of power. If they are not in a position of power they can feel a great deal of anxiety.
Unlike other dominant types they do not have to assert themselves in order to feel powerful. They know what they want and often have a strong desire to have others do what they want. In this way ENFJs can be very persuasive, but because of this they can also be quite manipulative.
ENFJs are very interested in human relationships and want things to be harmonious and pleasant. If something doesn't feel right they will become very unhappy and annoyed very quickly.
When they make a decision it is important for them to make sure that everyone else is happy and they will often overcompensate in order to make sure that everyone else is happy.
Michael "Mick" Philpott (born 1956) is a British convicted killer who was found guilty of causing the deaths of six of his children by arson in May 2012. Philpott, who had made several media appearances because of his benefits-funded lifestyle and polyamorous relationships, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the manslaughter of his children. He had first come to prominence in the British media as a result of his large family (having fathered seventeen children by various women), and his reliance on state benefits.
In April 2013, following an eight-week trial, he and his wife Mairead, together with their friend Paul Mosley, were found guilty of the manslaughter of the six children. Philpott was given a life sentence with a minimum term of fifteen years' imprisonment. Psychologist Glenn Wilson described Philpott as clinically a "psychopath" and "exhibitionist" with "antisocial personality disorder.