The couple joins several celebrities affected by the LA fires after their home in Pacific Palisades – bought for $2.5m (£2m) in 2017 – was burnt down. Spencer has documented the fallout on his social media, including images of his destroyed home, likening the area to a ‘war zone’.
Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag, the polarizing reality TV couple who rose to fame on MTV’s “The Hills” almost 20 years ago, have reentered the pop cultural spotlight after a social media cam ...
Spencer Pratt asked fans to buy and stream his ... "Superficial," which rose to No. 1 on iTunes on Saturday. Both Pratt and Montag shared their reactions to the news, thanking friends and fans ...
Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag have opened up about ... people know that.’ The pair rose to fame on MTV show The Hills in the noughties (Picture: Paul Archuleta/Getty Images) He explained ...
Reality stars Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag were among the countless ... In another video, he found several intact hunks of rose quartz, the base of a hummingbird feeder, and his children's ...
The recording is nominated against George Orwell’s 1984, Richard Powers' Playground: A Novel, Claire Oshetsky's Poor Deer, and Dan Slepian's The Sing Sing Files
Robert Eggers is biting into his next horror project. Eggers is reteaming with Focus Features for his next film “Werwulf,” a werewolf horror feature that he will direct from a script he co-wrote with Sjón,
Saudi Arabian Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal's investment company Kingdom Holding (KHC) would be interested to invest in TikTok if Elon Musk or others offered to buy it, CEO Talal Ibrahim al-Maiman told Al Arabiya TV on Wednesday.
Fans of the couple, who rose to fame on MTV's The Hills, soon rallied and started streaming Heidi's music. The singer's 2010 album, titled Superficial, quickly reached #1 on iTunes charts.
In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE, 'The Hills' alums open up about losing their home in the Los Angeles wildfires and how fans have rallied around them
What do you do when your house burns down? Sadly, it’s a question many Californians had to ask themselves over the past few weeks in the wake of devastating wildfires that ravaged large parts of the coastal region.