Your analysis is excellent and you have a very pleasant speaking voice. I can always count on you for good content, Psychocandy. Nice job. “It was Toto that made Dorothy laugh, and saved her from growing as gray as her other surroundings. Toto was not gray; he was a little black dog, with long silky hair and small black eyes that twinkled merrily on either side of his funny, wee nose. Toto played all day long, and Dorothy played with him, and loved him dearly.” ― L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz And It was a Wynstan Ferret who made (me) laugh.
Thank you for the kind words, Wynstan'sMom! I especially enjoyed this quote you shared- symbolically, Toto is a very important character as well. Baum was way ahead of his time!
It is so beautiful and hard being an NF . I love my vivid imagination and how I see clip, picture or image makes me feel as if I been there or it is similar like deja vu even though that place doesn't exist
When I was a kid I used to be very fascinated by sight, I look at my hand or any other object and wonder how is it even possible to see and whether the things we see are in fact accurate in reality or not.
@@psychocandy8093 Thank you, for the great content you've shared with us. I discovered your channel & was ammediately pleased with your depth. I'm also following TypeTips Leon, Caroline Zaikowsky, Scott Morgan, & Michael Pierce +...; Well, now your with them on my Jungian trusted folks. Congrats to that! Have a great day.
Hey Tony 🍓 It's me! Your favourite ENFP 🥳 I would have liked to be the wizard instead of the tin man, but thanks for the video I guess 😂 I hope in the future to see 👁👁 more visuals 🎥 in your videos, for example stock images and short clips. Have a fun day 🤸♀️
Haha, do you mean the big scary green head wizard or the man behind the curtain? I'll try to include more visuals in the future, I suppose this video was meant to be more in an audio format. My setup is kinda limited but I'm trying my best.
Enlightening. In 'The Wizard of Oz' (1939) movie the actor and university grad Frank Morgan played five characters. My favorite was Professor Marvel. I have a strong inkling as to what MBTI type he was. What do you think? You'll have to go back and watch the scene.
It's been a while, but I re-watched the scene towards the end where he hands out the rewards to the four main characters, and the Professor Marvel scene. And, oh yea, he does very much remind me of a particular person that you have mentioned in the past, haha. I think I know what you're getting at!
No, I am not referring to anyone else. What I mean to say is that specifically, Professor Marvel is a strong MBTI type. It was just an interesting fact that Morgan played so many characters in the movie. In fact I believe he played six: Professor Marvel, the guard at the gates of Oz, the taxi driver inside Oz, the guard at the entrance to the Oz throne room, Oz the Great and Powerful, and then the charlatan balloonist who hands out faux medals (it's a bit confusing because in the book the balloonist (Marvel??) and the man Oz were the same). But anyway, Professor Marvel uses introverted intuition to immediately spot a problem with runaway Dorothy and purposely makes wrong guesses with his extroverted feeling in an effort to harmonize before he confronts her as a runaway. And then how he treats Toto the dog who steals a hot dog -- "As one dog to another"' -- has up to three interpretations (INFJ word play, puns, symbolism). Professor Marvel, the polymath, has classic INFJ mysterious symbolism all throughout the inside of his wagon. He uses introverted thinking to "outwit her" to make her believe she must go right home. Once again, he uses extraverted feeling when he wishes the girl gets home safely and he expresses concern for his horse Sylvester's safety from the storm. His introverted intuition tells him the storm (tornado!) will be a "whopper." Note the complete change in tone and timber and accent of Professor Marvel's voice at the end revealing what he really sounds like (INFJ as chameleon). INFJ dark side cum-charlatan.
@@rayw3332 Oh okay, I gotcha. I was more fixated on the actor rather than the Professor. This is an interesting analysis, how you would interpret him taking the picture from her basket and for what reason? That puzzled me. The movie and Baum's work specifically is packed with so much symbolism... One of my favorites is the twister as a representation of the connection between the 'heavens' and the mundane which ultimately transports her to another world.
The Auntie Em picture? Dunno .... Marvel was klepto? He had an 'abracadabra' trick coming up involving the picture? He had hots for Em and planned a visit? (which he did) Marvel was mean? Marvel took it, Dorothy would then feel homesick she lost it, and go home? Marvel was not in the book (Oz was real, not a bump on the head, etc.) We may never know .... Dorothy, Glinda and Witch are interesting to type. (But then there was Mila Kunis as Theodora and those tight leather pants in 'Oz the Great and Powerful,' so I am all for movie director license)
SJ - 01:31
SP - 06:32
NT - 11:55
NF - 17:04
Your analysis is excellent and you have a very pleasant speaking voice. I can always count on you for good content, Psychocandy.
Nice job.
“It was Toto that made Dorothy laugh, and saved her from growing as gray as her other surroundings. Toto was not gray; he was a little black dog, with long silky hair and small black eyes that twinkled merrily on either side of his funny, wee nose. Toto played all day long, and Dorothy played with him, and loved him dearly.”
― L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
And It was a Wynstan Ferret who made (me) laugh.
Thank you for the kind words, Wynstan'sMom! I especially enjoyed this quote you shared- symbolically, Toto is a very important character as well. Baum was way ahead of his time!
It is so beautiful and hard being an NF . I love my vivid imagination and how I see clip, picture or image makes me feel as if I been there or it is similar like deja vu even though that place doesn't exist
When I was a kid I used to be very fascinated by sight, I look at my hand or any other object and wonder how is it even possible to see and whether the things we see are in fact accurate in reality or not.
Great addition.
Tarik (INFJ)
Thank you for the comment, Tarik. I'm glad to see more INFJ's finding my content!
@@psychocandy8093 Thank you, for the great content you've shared with us. I discovered your channel & was ammediately pleased with your depth. I'm also following TypeTips Leon, Caroline Zaikowsky, Scott Morgan, & Michael Pierce +...; Well, now your with them on my Jungian trusted folks.
Congrats to that!
Have a great day.
Watching this video, my mom said I was more SP as a child and as I grew up I developed into an NF.
Hey Tony 🍓
It's me! Your favourite ENFP 🥳
I would have liked to be the wizard instead of the tin man, but thanks for the video I guess 😂
I hope in the future to see 👁👁 more visuals 🎥 in your videos, for example stock images and short clips.
Have a fun day 🤸♀️
Haha, do you mean the big scary green head wizard or the man behind the curtain? I'll try to include more visuals in the future, I suppose this video was meant to be more in an audio format. My setup is kinda limited but I'm trying my best.
Enlightening.
In 'The Wizard of Oz' (1939) movie the actor and university grad Frank Morgan played five characters.
My favorite was Professor Marvel. I have a strong inkling as to what MBTI type he was.
What do you think? You'll have to go back and watch the scene.
It's been a while, but I re-watched the scene towards the end where he hands out the rewards to the four main characters, and the Professor Marvel scene. And, oh yea, he does very much remind me of a particular person that you have mentioned in the past, haha. I think I know what you're getting at!
No, I am not referring to anyone else. What I mean to say is that specifically, Professor Marvel is a strong MBTI type.
It was just an interesting fact that Morgan played so many characters in the movie. In fact I believe he played six: Professor Marvel, the guard at the gates of Oz, the taxi driver inside Oz, the guard at the entrance to the Oz throne room, Oz the Great and Powerful, and then the charlatan balloonist who hands out faux medals (it's a bit confusing because in the book the balloonist (Marvel??) and the man Oz were the same).
But anyway, Professor Marvel uses introverted intuition to immediately spot a problem with runaway Dorothy and purposely makes wrong guesses with his extroverted feeling in an effort to harmonize before he confronts her as a runaway. And then how he treats Toto the dog who steals a hot dog -- "As one dog to another"' -- has up to three interpretations (INFJ word play, puns, symbolism). Professor Marvel, the polymath, has classic INFJ mysterious symbolism all throughout the inside of his wagon. He uses introverted thinking to "outwit her" to make her believe she must go right home. Once again, he uses extraverted feeling when he wishes the girl gets home safely and he expresses concern for his horse Sylvester's safety from the storm. His introverted intuition tells him the storm (tornado!) will be a "whopper."
Note the complete change in tone and timber and accent of Professor Marvel's voice at the end revealing what he really sounds like (INFJ as chameleon).
INFJ dark side cum-charlatan.
@@rayw3332 Oh okay, I gotcha. I was more fixated on the actor rather than the Professor. This is an interesting analysis, how you would interpret him taking the picture from her basket and for what reason? That puzzled me. The movie and Baum's work specifically is packed with so much symbolism... One of my favorites is the twister as a representation of the connection between the 'heavens' and the mundane which ultimately transports her to another world.
The Auntie Em picture? Dunno ....
Marvel was klepto?
He had an 'abracadabra' trick coming up involving the picture?
He had hots for Em and planned a visit? (which he did)
Marvel was mean?
Marvel took it, Dorothy would then feel homesick she lost it, and go home?
Marvel was not in the book (Oz was real, not a bump on the head, etc.)
We may never know ....
Dorothy, Glinda and Witch are interesting to type.
(But then there was Mila Kunis as Theodora and those tight leather pants in 'Oz the Great and Powerful,' so I am all for movie director license)
@@rayw3332 Definitely had the hots for Em. Toto is the best character trumps them all.