In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE, Heidi Montag reveals what was going through her head when leaving during the Los Angeles fires and says she was in "fight or flight" mode.
Heidi Montag's "Superficial" album and songs have made $150,000 after her and Spencer Pratt's home burned down in the wildfires, Billboard estimates.
Heidi Montag opens up about losing cherished items in LA fires, shares plans for a beauty charity, and discusses plans for a reality TV show.
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.
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.
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.
Don’t expect Heidi Montag to hold a diamond on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills or appear on Andy Cohen’s Watch What Happens Live anytime soon. Amid their mainstream resurgence after being victims of the devastating Pacific Palisades fires where they lost their homes,
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.
Has Taylor Swift seen Spencer Pratt’s email? While on the Thursday, January 30, episode of the “Viall Files” podcast, the former reality TV star, 41, revealed he contacted the Eras Tour performer, 35,
Cohen claimed he "would sooner stab knives into my own eyes" than see Montag join the Bravo universe Speidi won't be appearing on Watch What Happens Live any time soon. As Heidi Montag's music career makes a comeback,
Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag are suing the city of Los Angeles and the Department of Water and Power, alleging that the agencies' management of the water supply directly caused damage to their home in the Pacific Palisades Fire.