So now the lawyers are saying that there was never any sex in the footage that Jennifer Lopez’s first husband was going to release.
“There wasn’t anything close to sex in it,” Lopez’s attorney John Lavely says “We never alleged that. But it’s still private and personal to my client.”
Read all about it below but it sounds like a major payoff to me.

A Los Angeles judge agreed Tuesday, upholding a ruling that Lopez’s ex, Ojani Noa, is forbidden from using 11-plus hours of home video – 20 percent of which allegedly features Lopez – for a mockumentary about his life as a Cuban immigrant, previously titled How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story.
The footage has scenes from the ex-couple’s marriage in Florida and honeymoon in Cuba, Noa’s film partner Claudia Vazquez tells PEOPLE, but the project was misrepresented by a tabloid as being sexual, she says. Vazquez adds the project’s title has since been changed to The Escape in reference to Noa having fled his home country.