Jennifer Lopez's so-called sex tape will not go public after her ex-husband was banned from using their "private and personal" home videos in a new mockumentary.
The singer had sought to block chef/model Ojani Noa from using candid footage filmed during their 11-month marriage in How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story.
Yesterday a judge upheld a ruling forbidding Noa from using the footage, which allegedly featured the couple on their honeymoon.
It also emerged the videos were not of a sexual nature, as had been widely reported in the media.
"There wasn't anything close to sex in it," Jennifer's lawyer John Lavely told People.
"We never alleged that. But it's still private and personal to my client."

















