American popstar Jennifer Lopez did not mince words as she performed at the Lucca Summer Festival in Italy on Monday, and she went on to boast about her raunchy sex life, while also taking a dig at ex-husband Ben Affleck.
She crooned her brand new song, Up All Night, during her performance on the Italian stage, and if the buzz in the tinsel town is true, then the song seemingly alludes to her failed marriage with Affleck. "I’m up all night, dancing on somebody, living my best life. I bet you wish that you were by my side. I got tired of you breaking me down," she sang.
She then went on to spill some of her bedroom secrets as she addressed the Lucca crowd and said, "I have to be honest with you, sometimes I get in different moods at night. I don’t know about you but I do, and sometimes I like it hard."

She went on to say, "Other days, I am feeling a little romantic. You put on candles and soft music. On those days, I like it real slow. But there’s other days... maybe because it’s a new kind of time for me, maybe because it’s summertime and it’s hot outside, I feel a little more naughty."
As the crowd roared, JLo continued, "You ever get that feeling? Where you feel like being naughty? On those days, I like it real fast."
During the performance, she also joked that she has decided to not sing her "love songs" during her European Tour anymore, and would rather belt out her "anti-love songs".
Reports had earlier stated that JLo's new album is inspired by everything that she went through when she was with Ben. "Wreckage Of You was so specifically about Ben, and Up All Night points to where Jennifer is at in her life right now. This is a whole new era for Jennifer and she isn’t going to be holding back," a report in The Sun stated.
In February, JLo and Ben officially got divorced after being married for two years. It was their second stint as a couple. In the early 2000s, they met, fell in love, got engaged and starred together in the infamous Gigli and Jersey Girl in 2004. They split up that same year, blaming in part the pressure of the public eye.