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Beatnuts

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J-Lo was sued for copyright infringement by the beatnuts, who used this sample in the same way earlier. Anyone got references that can back a little paragraph about it? Madskile 01:12, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The song you mean ist Watch out now, I guess. Everytime I listen to "Jenny from the Block" in the radio, I hear "Watch out now" in my mind... And sorry for my bad english... --DexterHolland (talk) 14:47, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Sampling

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- This needs editing.

Can you prove they sampled Enoch Light?

In fact it is obvious to every body that they STOLE this beat, from The Beatnuts.

That's right, they STOLE music from The Beatnuts , they DID NOT Credit them. And now on Wikipedia they are trying to say it was not so?


Revisionist History at its worse. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.93.193.178 (talk) 03:19, 30 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Music Video: A tedious description is seen.

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A few things wrong with the section about the video:

1. It is a shot-by-shot breakdown of the entire video. Is this really necessary? It's dull and repetitious. (Example: "Another scene is Lopez walking her dog, and then we see Lopez getting out of the car with Affleck, and then they sit to have lunch, Lopez has something in her eye and Affleck helps her remove it, then another scene is seen, where Lopez is in the studio recording the song, and she also drinks water; and looks outside the window, then we see Lopez in the car while Affleck fills it with gas, then they're seen looking at a magazine and after that kissing, a new scene surfaces, Lopez in nothing but a white trench coat and tiny underwear with her hair in a bun and with red lipstick, dancing erotically, while she's being filmed, then she's seen taking a break and her make artists are putting perfume on her, and she's seen laughing, then she's seen with Affleck in the pool, he pulls her up to reveal an erotic blue swimsuit in which her buttocks are fully visible, then she's seen splashing the water." Oh, yeah -- did I forget to mention the run-on sentences?)

2. The phrase "is seen" appears no less than nineteen (19) times in the two-paragraph section! As in, "Lopez is then seen washing the dog", or "Then, Affleck and Lopez are seen shopping at Home Depot". Is there something wrong with "Then Lopez washes the dog", or "Next, the happy couple goes shopping for a power drill"? A little variety, perhaps? Even an "is shown" would break up the monotony.

--63.25.249.247 (talk) 19:36, 14 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion

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