By 2001, Jennifer Lopez had solidified her status as a triple-threat global superstar. After rising to fame as a dancer in music videos in the 1990s, she had gone on to star in a handful of successful films, while her debut single, 1999s If You Had My Love, was a worldwide smash.
Now she had to prove she was here to stay. Love Don't Cost A Thing, released 20 years ago this week, was her statement that beyond the untold riches fame had brought her (at the time she was also dating incredibly wealthy rapper/record exec P.
Diddy), she hadn't forgotten her roots as a girl from a poor family from The Bronx. "Thought you'd understand, baby credit cards aren't romance," she sings to her materialistic lover, insisting: "Even if you were broke, my
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