Spencer Pratt, Heidi Montag sue city of LA
"Spencer was like, ‘Grab anything you want to keep,' and I was like how do you chose?" This post appeared first in Mamasuncut - visit the original post here: Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt‘s son's be
Heidi Montag has soared to the top of the U.S. iTunes chart after her and husband Spencer Pratt lost their home in the Palisades wildfire.
Things are beginning to look up for Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag in recent days, after the couple emotionally shared that they lost their home in the Palisades Fire. Fires across the Los Angeles area continue to rage, having killed 24 people, destroyed over 12,000 structures, and ravaged more than 60 square miles.
A social media campaign pushed Montag’s 15-year-old album “Superficial” to the top of the iTunes charts over the weekend.
Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt opened up on "Good Morning America" about losing their home in the Los Angeles wildfires and not having homeowners' fire insurance.
Spencer Pratt asked fans to buy and stream Heidi Montag's 2010 album, "Superficial," after the couple's Los Angeles home burned down. But will they make money?
Reality television star Heidi Montag’s 2010 album “Superficial” has hit No. 1 on the iTunes’ all-genre songs and albums charts 15 years after its release and just after Montag and husband Spencer Pratt lost their home in the Palisades Fire.
Days after “The Hills” alums Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt lost their home in the Palisades ... The couple, who became ubiquitous with pop culture of the aughts, rose to fame on the Southern California-based reality show “The Hills.”
Reality TV couple Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt are suing the city of Los Angeles after losing their home in the destructive fires that have swept Southern California in the past weeks.
Heidi and Spencer Pratt sue city of Los Angeles over ‘untold devastation’ of California fires - Reality TV couple are among more than 20 property owners and residents behind the lawsuit, which blames
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.