Current:Home > MyBurley Garcia|Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck are getting divorced. Why you can't look away. -VisionFunds
Burley Garcia|Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck are getting divorced. Why you can't look away.
SafeX Pro View
Date:2025-04-06 12:02:16
Jennifer Lopez and Burley GarciaBen Affleck are – after much, much, much speculation – getting divorced.
On Tuesday, Jennifer Lopez, 55, filed to divorce Ben Affleck, 52, in Los Angeles Superior Court, according to court filings obtained by USA TODAY. Tuesday marked the second anniversary of the estranged couple's Georgia wedding ceremony. TMZ and Variety report their date of separation as April 26.
TMZ was first to report the news. USA TODAY has reached out to reps for Affleck and Lopez for comment.
This was the second marriage for Affleck and the fourth for Lopez. The two were engaged to each other twice: first in 2002 then again in 2021.
Rumors about their divorce have been circulating for months, many of them cheeky and downright cruel in nature. But why?
Watching rich and famous people crumble is an appetizing pastime for many – particularly when it comes to the ups and downs of celebrities.
But the lampooning of JLo and Ben Affleck may say more about us than it does about them. Experts say we can't look away because of schadenfreude – finding joy in others' hardships – and the ever-tantalizing appeal of a good story.
"There's pleasure in watching rich people who seem to have it all and these (moments) remind us that, well, they really don't have it all," Elizabeth Cohen, associate professor at West Virginia University who researches psychology of media and pop culture, previously told USA TODAY. "And maybe they don't even necessarily deserve it all."
In case you're reeling:Kevin Costner and the shock over divorce after a long-term marriage
'It can be motivational, but make you feel bad about yourself'
A psychological theory called "social comparison" is behind our love for this drama, Cohen says. It posits that humans will always try and compare themselves to other people to figure out where they fit in the world. If you perceive someone is "better" than you, you fall into upward social comparison.
"The problem with upward social comparison is that it can be positive, but it makes you feel like you're not where you need to be," Cohen says. "So it can be motivational, but it can also make you feel bad about yourself."
The flip side is downward social comparison, where you consume media solely to look down on others. Seeing Lopez and Affleck divorce makes people realize that they aren't infallible, and therefore easy to project on and pile on.
"You watch these ridiculously wealthy people who have in a lot of ways, these enviable lives, but then they're not," Erica Chito-Childs, a sociology professor at Hunter College and The Graduate Center, CUNY, previously told USA TODAY.
Have you heard?! Sign up for USA TODAY's Everyone's Talking newsletter for all the internet buzz.
Remember:'Golden Bachelor' Gerry Turner, Theresa Nist divorce news shocks, but don't let it get to you
'We like watching other people behave in bad ways'
Reality TV and social media have shown us that even the rich and famous aren't so perfect – and audiences evidently revel in that. Any move Lopez and Affleck make that's even remotely cringey will be fodder for the vultures.
"We like watching other people behave in strange and bad ways," Robert Thompson, founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at the Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University, previously told USA TODAY. "We like watching other human beings melt down, regardless of their income status."
It's all part of what makes a good story. "There seems to be a narrative thread that we like watching people make this climb to wealth and status," Thompson says. "But once they actually get there, one of the only narrative threads left is to watch them fall. And we do get a lot of schadenfreude pleasure out of that if you look at a lot of the examples of stories that we tell."
Whether someone loves or hates (or loves to hate) this is a personal choice – not something ingrained in your brain.
"Why do some people hate this and why do some people like it? That's not a question for science," Thompson says. "That's a question of show business."
Either way, if you feel like you're spending too much time focused on celebrities you don't know, you probably are. It might be time to go explore your own block and stay off of Jenny's.
veryGood! (612)
Related
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- ‘Widespread’ sexual and gender-based crimes committed during Hamas attack, Israeli officials say
- Former top staffer of ex-congressman George Santos: You are a product of your own making
- All of These Dancing With the Stars Relationships Happened Off the Show
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Powerball winning numbers for December 4th drawing: Jackpot now at $435 million
- Bengals-Jaguars Monday Night Football highlights: Cincy wins in OT; Trevor Lawrence hurt
- Taraji P. Henson on the message of The Color Purple
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- CVS is switching up how it pays for prescriptions. Will it save you money?
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Complaint seeks to halt signature gathering by group aiming to repeal Alaska’s ranked voting system
- Air Force identifies the eight US crew lost in Osprey crash in Japan
- Harvard, MIT, Penn presidents defend actions in combatting antisemitism on campus
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Georgia lawmakers advance congressional map keeping 9-5 GOP edge; legislative maps get final passage
- High-speed rail line linking Las Vegas and Los Angeles area gets $3B Biden administration pledge
- Paraguay rounds up ex-military leaders in arms smuggling sting carried out with Brazil
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
DeSantis wants to cut 1,000 jobs, but asks for $1 million to sue over Florida State’s football snub
Maduro orders the ‘immediate’ exploitation of oil, gas and mines in Guyana’s Essequibo
Powerball winning numbers for December 4th drawing: Jackpot now at $435 million
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Wisconsin governor signs off on $500 million plan to fund repairs and upgrades at Brewers stadium
Teen and parents indicted after shootout outside Baltimore high school that left 3 wounded
Liz Cheney, focused on stopping Trump, hasn't ruled out 3rd-party presidential run