ESTP 7w6 Characters
Scarlett Johansson’s Zora Bennett bursts into Jurassic World: Rebirth like a raptor through a fence: bold, strategic, and impossible to ignore. As a black-market dinosaur wrangler, she’s part mercenary, part humanitarian, and all heart beneath her tough exterior. This personality analysis breaks down her ESTP 7w6 wiring, from her thrill-seeking pragmatism to her hidden altruism and emotional vulnerability. If you’re looking for a Jurassic heroine who’s equal parts snark and survival instinct, Zora’s your girl.
Extraverted Sensing
Zora is a high-stakes underground trader, who specializes in breaking the law and getting away with it. She’s hired for $10,000,000 to obtain living samples from three of the largest dinosaurs on Earth for heart research and does not hesitate to take the job, even though she knows it will be life-threatening.
In every intense situation—from rappelling down cliffs to robbing nests to her ship being attacked by a water predator—she feels at ease and confident in her environment. She often teases Dr. Loomis for being “out of his depth” because it’s much harder for him to cope with brutal reality than it is for her, as she’s hands-on and thrives under pressure.
She even argues with him to be the one firing the darts into the dinosaurs, because she doesn’t want to miss the chance to do it herself (and she’s an excellent shot). Zora insists on shooting the dinosaur herself, not just for control but for the thrill. She doesn’t just want to watch; she wants to feel it. She often changes plans in real-time, like when she yells at the group to change course mid-pursuit without hesitation. That’s pure Se: act first, assess later. Her previous partner died in a car bomb in a dangerous situation, but she still doesn’t hesitate to put herself in harm’s way, out of a felt sense that no matter what happens, she’ll be okay.
Introverted Thinking

At first, it’s all about the money with her. She even convinces one of her friends, a boat captain, to run a “scam” with her on their boss, so that they can renegotiate the contract for double. He pretends that he won’t risk his boat in such dangerous waters, forcing her to casually say that she could pay him better if they doubled what they wanted to give her.Then when a third crew member tries the same scam, she tells him “we ran that one already,” implying that they do this a lot—hijack up the price and push people into desperation to get them to keep their original terms.
Elsewhere, she copes with losing people with a sense of pragmatism until it comes to Duncan being “eaten.” Then she freezes and almost has an emotional meltdown; he is her best friend, one of her dearest partners, and she can’t fathom him dying. The rest of the time, she is rational, telling people to move past problems and look for solutions, and not put themselves at risk unnecessarily. She never agonizes over whether what she’s doing is right or wrong; she makes decisions based on internal logic and what seems to make the most sense.
Extraverted Feeling
When they hear that a boat has capsized and a family is stranded, she ignores her boss’ demands that they continue on their mission and goes to rescue them instead (she says she is the boss on this job, and they’re going to save that family).
When Dr. Loomis suggests that they could make their discoveries open source and share them with the world, at first she asks him what the financial benefit would be for her. When he admits that she won’t get paid, she laughs it off. But later, she agrees with him to share this discovery with the world, implying that she saw the deaths of her team as being worth something more than money, and she cares for the general welfare of humanity.
Introverted Intuition
Some of her impulsive ideas are not well thought-out (if they rescue the family, they’ll be putting them in more danger by chasing down the dinosaur that capsized their boat for a blood sample). But she does have a plan for rescue in place if everything goes wrong—a helicopter that will come and get them after 48 hours of radio silence on their end. It will loop around the island once, for two minutes, and await their signal from the helicopter pad.
Dr. Loomis helps her embrace a larger vision for her life, dependent on what they do with the blood samples. She connects the samples to future possibilities for good, beyond her usual “how do I survive this week?” mindset. That’s a subtle Ni arc.
The Enneagram 7

Zora has a way of focusing on the positive and turning things into a joke, rather than dealing with them too deeply. She is avoiding her grief and from processing her emotions over her dead partner and friend by continuing to take high-adrenaline, high-paying jobs.
On task, she cracks jokes, tells people that it is all going to turn out fine, and remains positive and self-confident even when the situation gets bad, because she knows she can figure out a way out. She deflects off serious conversations that she doesn’t want to have with humor and charm (Loomis provoking her conscience by talking about how this company will use the blood samples to create expensive medicine that only the richest people can afford, and how they could share it with the world; she immediately cracks a big smile and says that getting no money isn’t great for her).
The 6 Wing
She has an altruistic side that ultimately chooses to do the right thing, and sacrifice $20,000,000 to be a humanitarian. But before that, she shows a desire to do what’s best for everyone she meets; she halts their mission to rescue a family and then tries to save their lives several times.
When she finds out her boss let a girl fall off the side of the boat, she is livid and suspicious of his motives. Zora does not trust him right off the bat, and keeps her eye on him, creating contingency plans that he knows nothing about. Her backup plan that involves rescue isn’t just Ni planning, it’s expecting the worst and proactively preparing against it, which is what 6 excels at doing. Her immediate distrust, need to gather facts, and refusal to accept orders blindly is very 6ish, especially paired with her desire to protect the group.
She is willing to take risks, but also pulls back when things get too dangerous and yells at Dr. Loomis not to risk his life for a vial, since she can’t hang on to the rope forever.
Raptor Brain, Human Heart
Zora Bennett is a thrill-seeker, a strategist, and a reluctant hero. Her ESTP 7w6 personality fuses action and adaptability with hidden vulnerability and slowly awakening ideals. She begins the story chasing cash and adventure—but ends it choosing morality over money, and people over profit. Like the dinosaurs she risks her life for, Zora is built for survival… but ultimately chooses something greater than just getting out alive.





