Tattle: J.Lo goes from one marriage to another - for $1M, says TMZ

July 20, 2011

SHE HASN'T been separated for even a week and already Jennifer Lopez has become a wedding singer.

Make that a wedding singer whose fee is a million bucks.

TMZ.com reports that Jennifer was scheduled to perform

before 300 guests at a Ukrainian wedding last night.

Given that she was supposed to hit the stage at 11:30 p.m., no one was expecting the audience to be too sober.

Story continues below.

TMZ says the World Health Organization has rated Ukraine as No. 1 in the world for alcohol consumption among youth.

Not to mention wasting money on wedding entertainment.

A Jennifer source acknowledged that the performance time was "a little weird."

For a million dollars Tattle will serenade any bride and groom at any time.

* Word is starting to leak out about the constant fighting in the Lopez-Marc Anthony marriage, and the Lopez side says that Anthony was a bit of a control freak.

Wasn't that the problem with his last marriage - to beauty queen Dayanara Torres?

Us Weekly may have named Lopez the Style Icon of the Decade in spring 2010, but the magazine says that Anthony tried to influence her choice of outfits during an Us photo shoot.

An unnamed source said he objected to a photo he found "too sexy and unbecoming for a 40-year-old mother of two."

"He would make her feel terrible about herself if she wanted to wear something sexy," said another anonymous insider. "He likes her to dress in a demure, 'wife' style. He hated the fact that she was a sex symbol."

Maybe Anthony should hook up with one of the Sister Wives.

No 'Glee' in the courtroom

 Not all parts of "Glee" are harmonious.

According to TMZ.com, Michael Novick, a "Glee" producer, is suing co-creator Ian Brennan, his good friend.

Novick claims that Brennan originally developed "Glee" as a feature film and that the two agreed to work together to sell the project.

At Novick's Santa Monica gym, however, he met TV- show runner Ryan Murphy ("Nip/Tuck"). Novick pitched the idea to Murphy, and he convinced Novick that it would make a great TV series.

Novick's suit claims that when Murphy pitched the show to Rupert Murdoch's Fox (no hacking that we know of took place during negotiations), Brennan persuaded Novick to accept a lower fee and credit in return for 15 percent of any back-end compensation Brennan would receive.

Novick is suing for unspecified damages.

It's Hollywood accounting, dude! There's never a back-end.

Tattbits

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