Jennifer Lopez
just aired her final show on ‘American Idol’ after being a
judge judge for several years, with the series airing its finale last
week (click here to see the highlights). The star still has a
lot going for her – her latest single ‘Ain’t Your Mama’ (click here to hear it)
and her TV show ‘Shades Of Blue’ getting renewed for a second season.
Her Vegas residency will also kick off its second leg next month and run
until July.
She speaks about all these and more in the latest edition of W Magazine.
In this issue, Jennifer talks about her love life- her divorce from
Marc Anthony, her work pace and her fans and critics’ views of her.
Here are excerpts from her interview with W:
On Marc Anthony and future love
“When it comes to work, I never get
tired. But with personal failures, I have thought, This is too hard.
When my marriage ended, it was not easy to find forgiveness. It wasn’t
the dream that I had hoped for, and it would have been easier to fan the
flames of resentment, disappointment, and anger. But Marc is the father
of my children [8-year-old twins], and that’s never going away. So, I
have to work to make things right. And that is, by far, the hardest work
I do.I hung in there for seven years,” Lopez elaborated. “I knew very
quickly that it wasn’t the right thing.” “I still think about getting
married and having that long life with someone. I love the movie The Notebook. A dream of mine is to grow old with someone.”
On if she thinks the Kardashians stole the shine off her derriere
Lopez smiled. “I think I paved the way for the Kardashaians,” she said. “Just another innovation that I’ve given to the world!”
On keeping up with her work pace
“I do have trouble saying no,” she
replied. “It’s hard for me not to imagine doing everything I am asked to
do. Even if I hear a song that someone else has done or watch a film
that someone else is in, I think, Oh, I would do it like this. Or, I
wish I could do it like that. Luckily, I love to work.”
On life since she started judging on American Idol in 2011
“It has been easier,” she said. “People
may now think I’m ‘nice,’ but they still act surprised when I’m smart.
It’s a man’s world, and, truly, people in a business setting do not
value a woman as much as a man. I feel like I’m constantly having to
prove myself. If a man does one thing well, people immediately say he’s a
genius. Women have to do something remarkable over and over and over.
And, even then, they get questions about their love life.” She shrugged.
“People underestimate me. They always have, and maybe that’s for the
best. It’s fun to prove them wrong.”
Read the entire interview here.
Photo Credit: W Magazine
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