It's not too long ago that you either had very clumsy type systems - C, Java. These type systems were more of a chore than anything else. Especially the generic transition in java was just tedious, you had to type cast a lot of stuff, and the compiler would still yell at you, and things would still crash.
Or you had very powerful and advanced type systems - Haskell and C++ with templates for example. However, these type systems were just impenetrable. C++ template errors before clang error messages are something. They are certainly an error message. But fixing those without a close delta what happened? Pfsh. Nah.
In those days, dynamic typing was great. You could shed the chore of stupid types, and avoid the really arcane work of making really strong types work.
However, type systems have matured. Today, you can slap a few type annotations on a python function and a modern type inference engine can give you type prediction, accurate tab-completion and errro detection. In something like rust, you define a couple of types in important locations and everything else is inferred.
This in turn gives you the benefit of both: You care about types in a few key locations, but everything else is as simple as a dynamically typed language. And that's when statically typed languages can end up looking almost - or entirely - like a dynamically typed language. Except with less error potential.
"errros" are my nemesis in languages which automatically create a new symbol with every typo!