Luis Guzmán was not channeling the smooth-talking Gomez Addams when asked about working with Jennifer Lopez.

The stars of the Netflix hit “Wednesday” were on Monday’s episode of “Hot Ones Versus,” in which each cast member takes turns asking their co-stars questions, and if they mess up, they have to consume an incredibly spicy chicken wing.

Nearly 10 minutes into the episode, Guzmán was asked to describe some of the A-list celebrities he’s worked with throughout his impressive 40-year acting career in just one word.

The first up was Adam Sandler, who worked with Guzmán in 2002’s “Punch-Drunk Love” and 2003’s “Anger Management.”

“Amazing,” Guzmán gushed of the Sand Man.

Next up was Catherine Zeta-Jones, who currently plays Gomez’s wife, Morticia Addams, in “Wednesday.”

“Belíssima,” Guzmán praised his former “Traffic” co-star.

Next up, he was asked about Lopez, who worked with him in 1998’s “Out of Sight.”

“OK,” Guzmán smirked — causing his co-stars’ jaws to drop.

Luis Guzmán's take on working with Jennifer Lopez, center, left his co-star Joy Sunday, right, floored in a recent "Hot Ones" episode.Luis Guzmán’s take on working with Jennifer Lopez, center, left his co-star Joy Sunday, right, floored in a recent “Hot Ones” episode.

Screenshots First We Feast via YouTube/Getty

The same year Lopez starred in “Out of Sight,” she also shared her own unfiltered opinions about other celebrities in an interview with Movieline.

“I swear to God, I don’t remember anything she was in,” Lopez said of Gwyneth Paltrow, who would go on to win Best Actress the next year at the 1999 Oscars.

In the same interview, Lopez called Cameron Diaz a “lucky model,” said she was “never a big fan” of Winona Ryder, though she praised both women’s looks, and she said that she and Salma Hayek were “in two different realms.”

When Vanity Fair confronted Lopez in 2011 about trash-talking other actors to Movieline, the “Hustlers” star said she had been “misquoted.”

“I was so misquoted and so taken out of context, and it’s a sore subject for me,” Lopez told Vanity Fair. “I don’t like to hurt anybody. I don’t like to hurt their feelings. I like to joke, so I do that sometimes. What they wrote in that article hurt people. [After reading it,] I just sat down and cried for hours.”

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Watch Guzmán’s evaluation of his past co-stars below.