Heidi Montag, Spencer Pratt
Spencer Pratt is bringing in the dough. The reality star, 41, revealed how much money he’s made on TikTok since his and wife Heidi Montag’s house burnt down in the Los Angeles fires earlier this month.
Spencer Pratt revealed that he received impressive financial gains from online picture and video sharing after suffering a huge setback.
Reality TV couple are among more than 20 property owners and residents behind the lawsuit, which blames Los Angeles and its water department for the issues that hampered firefighting efforts
Spencer Pratt revealed he has made thousands of dollars in TikTok earnings after he and his wife, Heidi Montag, lost their home in the Los Angeles wildfires.
Spencer and Heidi are rebuilding their life after the L.A. fires burned down their house, but with a little help from fans.
Spencer Pratt shut down the possibility that wife Heidi Montag will appear on “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” on Bravo — partly because of comments that Andy Cohen made about Montag, 38, over 10 years ago.
Pratt and Montag are also among over 20 homeowners from the Pacific Palisades who are suing the city of Los Angeles, along with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) claiming its water system failed and turned a bad wildfire into an absolute catastrophe.
You know, I'm very conflicted with it. It sounds silly, but I was so sad about losing my clothes. 'They're just things, but they're things that I spent 15 to 20 years collecting.'
Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt want to make a reality show about "rebuilding" their community. The couple - who have sons Gunner, seven, and two-year-old Ryker together - lost their $2.5 million home in the Pacific Palisades fire earlier this month and admitted they are "ready" to let cameras back into their lives to give a glimpse in how they and their neighbours are starting afresh.
Heidi Montag's Superficial sold a little more than 11,200 copies in the U.S., up 224,000% from the week before, making the decade-plus-old title a hit for the first time.
Spencer Pratt has never been one for subtlety, and after the Palisades Fire reduced both his and his parents’ homes to ashes, he’s channeled his relentless energy into social media. His mission? Shutting down the online narrative that wildfire victims — namely,