Entertainment Roundup: Jennifer Lopez features daughter in new video; Olamide, Lil Kesh react to backlash from lyrics in ‘Logo Benz’ | Other stories

Here’s everything you missed in entertainment yesterday and others that unravelled while you slept – and are still buzzing today:

Jennifer Lopez release new video, features 10-year old daughter Emme

American singer and actress, Jennifer Lopez on Thursday released the music video for “Limitless,” a song featured in her upcoming film Second Act.

 

 

The video, which is the first music video Lopez has ever directed, tells a story of triumph and determination, and her 10-year daughter Emme, who was featured in the video as a younger version of her mom, can be seen climbing up a hill, refusing to give up on making it to the top throughout the clip, until she reached her goal.

“When I tell you, she was so amazing and I was so proud. I forgot that I was directing my first video, it was all about her. It was all about her,”  an emotional Lopez told Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show last week.


Olamide reacts to criticisms over his lyrics on Lil Kesh’s ‘Logo Benz.’

Nigerian rapper and singer, Olamide has defended himself over backlashes against him over his lyrics on Lil Kesh’s new single, ‘Logo Benz’ as both artistes were criticised for allegedly glorifying money rituals in parts of the song whose lyrics states: ”If money no enter, I go do blood money.”

Lil Kesh had earlier replied a comment on popular blog, Instablog on Thursday which called for caution among artistes for choice of lyrics, by saying ”If money no enter, I go do blood money. “Talk your own. We nor dey promote wetin don dey exist, na awareness we dey do. So spread your pata at owner’s risk because won ka pata o.”


 

Lord of the Rings Director, brings Old WWI Footage Back to Life in 3D for New Documentary

Lord of the Rings Director and Oscar winner, Peter Jackson is bringing his imaginative, epic filmmaking style to a new documentary about World War I veterans, They Shall Not Grow Old, People.com reports.

 

According to the The New York Times, the movie is already making headlines because of Jackson’s decision to tell the soldiers’ stories using footage from that era that’s more than 100 years old.

“I think a lot of younger people don’t know that their great, great-grandfather or their great, great-uncle was actually a soldier in this war,” he continued. “I hope it inspires them to want to know a little bit more of their family history,” Jackson the Sun.

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