Heidi Montag, Spencer Pratt
The Hills stars Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag have responded to backlash after a GoFundMe was set up on their behalf following the destruction of their home in the LA wildfires.
The lawsuit blames the city of Los Angeles and the Department of Water and Power for the water issues that hampered firefighting efforts.
Reality TV couple Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt are suing the city of Los Angeles after losing their Pacific Palisades home in the California wildfires in recent weeks.
Reality TV couple Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt are suing the ... The celebrity couple, who rose to stardom on The Hills, a spin-off of Laguna Beach, filed the lawsuit on Tuesday along with ...
Fans are calling for Heidi Montag to be cast on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills amid the revival of her music career. Her husband, Spencer Pratt, saw all the chatter online a
The chatter continued after Pratt was asked on X if he would “ever go to the clubhouse for Watch What Happens Live ,” a proposal Pratt swiftly rejected, referring to past beef with host Andy Cohen. “The person who said he would rather scratch his eyes out then watch my wife … hard pass,” he wrote with another heart emoji.
During the Wednesday, January 29, episode of his SiriusXM show, Andy Cohen Live, Cohen, 56, explained that after he was “tagged” in comments about Pratt, 41, not wanting to appear on Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen he reflected on why The Hills alum would be mad at him.
The lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court by McNulty Law and Wood Law alleges "inverse condemnation," the same mechanism that requires utilities to pay for wildfire damages caused by their equipment.
Cohen said in 2011, "I would sooner stab knives into my own eyes than see [Montag] on this network.” He apologized a few days later.
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.
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