Since releasing the official music video of her song "Booty" featuring Iggy Azalea on Thursday, Jennifer Lopez is already receiving an alleged endorsement from Doc Johnson Lube company, TMZ reports.

After watching a scene in the "Booty" music video where Lopez is drenched in what the company believes to be lubricant, Doc Johnson reps have reached out to the sultry singer to work out a possible sponsorship deal and offer Lopez a year's worth of lubrication gel for free.

So far Lopez has not responded to the offer.

Though Doc Johnson may approve of Lopez's sexually charged video, many critics have slammed the 45-year-old mogul for what they they claim is objectifying herself and succumbing to the overwhelming trend in the music business that is "sex sells."

"Jennifer Lopez's Objectifying 'Booty' Video Makes It Official: We've Reached Booty Exhaustion," The Daily Beast's Kevin Fallon titles his article.

Fallon then continues his piece by comparing Lopez's "Booty" music video to Nicki Minaj's booty-filled video, "Anaconda."

"[Booty] is so blatant and blunt that it makes Nicki Minaj's 'Anaconda"'look like high art," he wrote. "There's almost a little bit of irony in the fact that J. Lo -- she of the derriere so divine that she had a $27 million insurance policy on it, she of the rear end that might be responsible for this whole thing -- is now the one beating the dead horse. Well, beating the dead horse's ass."

Breitbart's John Nolte also slammed Jennifer Lopez's "Booty" music video and admitted that he was so turned off by the video that he could not continue watching it.

"Maybe it improves after the two-minute mark. I couldn't finish it," he wrote. "Libertinism is the opposite of sexy and erotic. It's ugly and degrading. Apparently, this is [the] only envelope left for popular culture to push. It's also another reminder that feminism was a gift to men who see women as nothing more than hunks of meat created for their sick pleasure."

Check out J.Lo's "Booty" music video featuring Iggy Azalea below.