What is the personality type of Luanne? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Luanne from 35mm A Musical Exhibition and what is the personality traits.
Luanne personality type is ISFJ, which means that you are very responsible, responsible with people, responsible with money, responsible with work, responsible with law, responsible with order, responsible with responsibility. ISFJs are idealists, so they are very organized, very clean. They are very neat, organized, neat with the money, neat with their work, neat with their home, neat with their family. They are very faithful to their work.
I am the most faithful person in the world. I'm faithful to my work and to my family and to my friends and to my husband and I don't like to be the one who is not faithful. But I am... I don't like to be the one who is not organized.
I don't like to be the one who is not clean and neat and who doesn't like to be tidy. I like to be tidy. I like to be organized. I like to be neat. I like to be clean. So that's why I love this job because it is all about organization and cleanliness and tidiness. So that's why I love this job because it is all about organization and cleanliness and tidiness.
SP: What do you like about it?
"Luanne" was the fifth and final single taken from the album 4 by the band Foreigner, and the second to feature a B-side that was not available on one of their albums, a controversial live version of their hit, "Hot Blooded". The song was written by Lou Gramm & Mick Jones and reached number 75 in the U.S. charts, but was a live staple for years to come. The live version of "Hot Blooded" was later placed on the international release of their retrospective, Records, but in subsequent re-releases has been dropped in favour of the original album version due to a couple of choice words spoken in ad lib during the song's performance by its singer, Lou Gramm. Rolling Stone Magazine contributor Kurt Loder felt the song sounded like it could have been written by John Fogerty. WCSC-TV music director Chris Bailey praised it, saying that it sounded like songs from REO Speedwagon's Hi Infidelity album.