Jennifer Lopez brought a high-energy retrospective of her biggest hits to tonight's Super Bowl LIV Halftime Show—and made time to pay homage to her most iconic movie role to date.

Following Shakira's steamy medley of mid-aughts essentials like "She Wolf," "Whenever, Wherever," and "Hips Don't Lie," J.Lo ascended to the stage hanging from a glowing pole before performing "Jenny From the Block," "Ain't It Funny," and "Get Right." Following a quick change of costume, she returned to the pole for a routine reminiscent of her now-iconic performance in last year's Hustlers. Whereas that number was set to Fiona Apple's "Criminal," Lopez moved to her 1999 hit "Waiting for Tonight" for her Super Bowl routine.

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Ok, J.Lo doing a pole dance in the middle of her #SuperBowl halftime performance is the greatest homage to Hustlers. pic.twitter.com/qXNoyNJpu8 — Alyssa Bailey (@alyssabailey) February 3, 2020

Lopez was notably snubbed from this year's Oscar nominations, even though she was considered a frontrunner for her Hustlers role as Ramona Vega, a seasoned stripper who mentors newcomer Destiny (Constance Wu) before pulling her into a Recession-fueled crime scheme. Lopez was nominated for a Golden Globe, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Critics' Choice Award for her performance in the Lorene Scafaria film, based on the New York Magazine article "The Hustlers at Scores" by Jessica Pressler.

Twitter immediately connected the Super Bowl stripping routine to Lopez's Oscar snub.

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Jennifer Lopez said: Fuck you, AMPAS. — Esther Zuckerman (@ezwrites) February 3, 2020

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I just assumed J. Lo’s stage would be an Oscar statuette burning in effigy — Dave Itzkoff (@ditzkoff) February 3, 2020

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j lo said u can keep ur best supporting oscar nomination pic.twitter.com/Yu0mX6Psw3 — David Mack (@davidmackau) February 3, 2020

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J Lo giving this level of performance on the Sunday before the Oscars, pole included, after not being nominated...



A level of petty we can all only aspire to. — Kendra! (@KendraJames_) February 3, 2020

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Just a reminder that the Academy could have nominated J. Lo and did not — Meredith Blake (@MeredithBlake) February 3, 2020

To think, we could've watched an encore of this next Sunday. If only the Academy had some respect.

Julie Kosin Senior Culture Editor Julie Kosin is the senior culture editor of ELLE.com, where she oversees all things movies, TV, books, music, and art, from trawling Netflix for a worthy binge to endorsing your next book club pick.

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