People

Lopez splits with husband No. 2

New York J. Lo is solo again.

A source confirmed to The Associated Press Friday that Jennifer Lopez and her dancer-husband, Cris Judd, have separated. The source said the pair had parted amicably and have no immediate plans for divorce.

A spokesman for Lopez declined to confirm or deny the split.

The 31-year-old actress-singer married Judd, 32, in a private ceremony in Calabasas, Calif. The Sept. 29 nuptials came just months after she broke up with hip-hop mogul Sean “P. Diddy” Combs, with whom she had a highly publicized romance.

Judd appeared prominently as a background dancer in the video for her hit “Love Don’t Cost a Thing,” but in recent months has become more active in her career. He directed the video for the Ja Rule remix of her song “Ain’t It Funny,” and choreographed her recent NBC concert special.

Lopez married model Ojani Noa in 1997 and divorced him the following year.

Falwell satire site allowed to stay

Lynchburg, Va. A Web site that pokes fun at the Rev. Jerry Falwell and uses his name without his consent will be allowed to continue, an international arbiter of Internet domain names has ruled.

The World Intellectual Property Organization denied Falwell’s complaint against Gary Cohn, owner of www.jerryfalwell.com, in a decision distributed Thursday.

The Geneva, Switzerland-based arbiters’ panel denied Falwell’s claim that he had a common-law trademark on his name.

“The complainant has failed to show that his name, well-known as it is, has been used in a trademark sense as a label of particular goods or services,” the decision reads.

Previous WIPO policy has ruled that protection should be limited to personal names that have been commercially exploited.

The three-member panel’s decision also applies to www.jerryfallwell.com, another Web site that parodies Falwell.

Bergman stocks foundation

Stockholm, Sweden Film director Ingmar Bergman will donate raw footage, photographs and manuscripts from his films and plays to a new foundation to be set up in his honor.

The archive material will help researchers study the thought processes that went into Bergman’s work, Swedish Film Institute spokesman Jan Goeransson said.

“It’s amazing material that becomes available. It will be a huge source for researchers to dig through,” Goeransson said.

The foundation will be set up by arts institutions and media organizations, including the film institute and Swedish Television.

Bergman, 83, whose film classics include “The Seventh Seal” and “Fanny and Alexander,” is producing a television play for Swedish Television.