Jennifer Lopez has never been shy about narrating her own love story. The problem is she keeps having to revise it.
In February 2024, Lopez released a documentary about her rekindled romance with Ben Affleck. The title: The Greatest Love Story Never Told. The film chronicled their fairy-tale reunion—two decades after their first engagement fell apart—and positioned their 2022 marriage as the ending they were always meant to have.
Six months later, she filed for divorce.
By September 2025, Lopez was sitting down with CBS Sunday Morning and reframing the split as a gift.
“Honestly, I have to say, it was the best thing that ever happened to me,” she told host Lee Cowan in an interview that aired September 28. “Because it changed me. It helped me grow in a way that I needed to grow, become more self-aware. I’m a different person now than I was last year.”
Now, Lopez is in a new chapter—and offering a new narrative to match. During a sold-out show at her “Up All Night Live in Las Vegas” residency at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace on January 4, the 56-year-old singer paused after performing her 1999 hit “If You Had My Love” to deliver what felt like a mission statement.
“When I first sang it, I was very young. I was a little baby in the woods, and I sang it with a lot of hope,” Lopez told the crowd in a moment captured on video and shared on social media. “But I’ve also sang it over the years. I’ve sang it while I was sad and I’ve sang it when I was happy. But now, today, you know how I sing it? I sing it in power.”
She continued: “Because the truth is, if you wanted to have my love, you would have to earn it. You would have to treat me right. You would have to respect me. You’d have to accept me for all that I am.”
The crowd cheered. It was a powerful moment—the kind of empowerment messaging that plays well on Instagram and in headlines.
But it also landed just twelve months after she finalized a marriage she had publicly framed as destiny fulfilled.
Lopez addressed her romantic history with characteristic humor during the opening night of her residency on December 30.
“It’s been 10 years since my last residency. That went by in a blink,” she told the audience, referencing her 2016-2018 run at Planet Hollywood. “And in that time, I’ve only been married twice.”
She paused, then corrected herself: “That’s not true. It was only once. Felt like twice. I’m kidding.”
The joke landed. But it also underscored the whiplash.

Lopez has been married four times: to Ojani Noa (1997-1998), Cris Judd (2001-2003), Marc Anthony (2004-2014), and Affleck (2022-2025). Each relationship has been accompanied by its own public narrative—and its own public revision.
What makes the Affleck chapter stand out is the velocity of the rewrite. They rekindled in 2021, married in Las Vegas in July 2022, and held a second ceremony in Georgia a month later. Then came This Is Me… Now, Lopez’s 2024 album explicitly about Affleck, accompanied by a musical film and the documentary that positioned their love as something almost fated.
The divorce filing came in August 2024, listing April 26 as the date of separation—just two months after The Greatest Love Story Never Told premiered.
Despite the split, the two have remained publicly intertwined. Lopez and Affleck attended the New York premiere of Kiss of the Spider Woman together in October 2025—a film he executive produced. Over the holidays, they were spotted Christmas shopping in Los Angeles. They’ve both appeared at school events for their children.
None of this makes Lopez a hypocrite. People grow. Perspectives shift. A marriage can be both meaningful and wrong for you. Calling a divorce “the best thing that ever happened to me” doesn’t erase what came before—it reframes it.
But what’s fascinating about Lopez is the willingness to do that reframing in real time, in public, with the full machinery of celebrity behind it.
Most people process their breakups privately. Lopez released a documentary, then a divorce filing, then a CBS interview, then a Vegas residency speech—all within 18 months.
The result is a kind of whiplash that’s hard to look away from. It’s not scandal. It’s not gossip. It’s something stranger: watching someone revise the story of their own life while the rest of us are still catching up to the last draft.
Lopez’s Vegas residency continues through March 2026.