Rocco The Beaver - Personality

Personality

Rocco is best characterized as a sex-fixated perverted beaver. Usually he is very exaggerated and extremely politically incorrect and has by his own account done (as in: had sexual intercourse with) a lot of persons and things.

  • Actor Mads Mikkelsen
  • Writer Hanne-Vibeke Holst
  • The Vatican City
  • St. Peter's Basilica
  • Actress Ghita Nørby
  • Musician Kasper Eistrup
  • Ga-jol liquorice pastilles
  • Albatrosses
  • Cars
  • Fishing cutters
  • Cows
  • Horses
  • Cheese
  • The Pope
  • The National Museum of Denmark
  • Mona Lisa
  • Ears and pinnas
  • Priests
  • Politician Marianne Jelved
  • Windows
  • Keyways
  • Soaps

In one episode he proclaims, that his own mother has taught him about sex. His semen is mostly referred to as "sticky beaver juice." In general he ses everything in a sexual context.

The character has grown very popular, and has - because of this - recorded his own song, titled Fucky fucky, in which he sings his signature-quote: "I'd like to bang it".

Read more about this topic:  Rocco The Beaver

Famous quotes containing the word personality:

    Western man represents himself, on the political or psychological stage, in a spectacular world-theater. Our personality is innately cinematic, light-charged projections flickering on the screen of Western consciousness.
    Camille Paglia (b. 1947)

    A personality is an indefinite quantum of traits which is subject to constant flux, change, and growth from the birth of the individual in the world to his death. A character, on the other hand, is a fixed and definite quantum of traits which, though it may be interpreted with slight differences from age to age and actor to actor, is nevertheless in its essentials forever fixed.
    Hubert C. Heffner (1901–1985)

    Unable to create a meaningful life for itself, the personality takes its own revenge: from the lower depths comes a regressive form of spontaneity: raw animality forms a counterpoise to the meaningless stimuli and the vicarious life to which the ordinary man is conditioned. Getting spiritual nourishment from this chaos of events, sensations, and devious interpretations is the equivalent of trying to pick through a garbage pile for food.
    Lewis Mumford (1895–1990)