WHY JUDGE JUDY MARRIED HER HUSBAND TWO TIMES

The famous name of the famous TV Show, Judge Judy Sheindlin, married to her husband Jerry Sheindlin, a lawyer and a former judge.

Judy and Jerry always supported each other, and even they asked to each other about the things they would choose for their careers. When Jerry was offered a spot on “The People’s Court,” he asked to his wife.

“She is the one who told me I should do it,” Jerry said.

“I think that behind every great woman there is a man. […] But I also heard a rumor that behind every great man, there is a woman.”

They first met in a bar, after Jerry defended a murder case. When Judy entered into the bar, Jerry was talking to a reporter.

Then Judy walked towards them and pointed at him and asked who is this? Jerry said, “‘Lady, get your finger out of my face.’ We’ve been together ever since.”

As Jerry loved that his wife was successful in TV, he said, “If my show takes off and I beat her, I am contacting Hollywood immediately to remake the movie ‘Sleeping With the Enemy.'”

“Why does the government have to dictate our relationship, it’s just a piece of paper. We’re already devoted to each other, we’re already committed to each other,” Jerry said to Judy.

Jerry and Judy Sheindlin attend 46th Annual Spirit of Achievement Luncheon on May 1, 2000, in New York City. | Source: Getty Images

Judy said that he should ask her father if he wanted to live together, and then Jerry set a wedding date, and they were married in 1977.

In 1990, they divorced as they had some problems in their marriage. After Judy’s father, Murray Blum, passed away, they had some emotional problems and that led to their divorce.

Jerry and Judy Sheindlin pictured down Madison Ave on January 29, 2002, in New York City. | Source: Getty Images

A year later, they married again.

“I missed her presence the very first week that we were separated. It was the first time in years that we didn’t get to see each other every single day. It was such a strange experience.” Jerry said.

When Judy was asked about her decision to remarry Jerry in 1991, she said, “That’s a long story, but the end of the story is: I found … that most men were alike.”

“They have basic needs that are different from women’s,” Judy said.

What do you think? Let us know.