Spencer Pratt is still ‘angry’ over L.A. fires

Spencer Pratt continues to be choosing up the emotional items three months after wildfires tore by way of Los Angeles, and no, there’s no Zen backyard second occurring simply but.
“It’s not peace — it’s anger,” The Hills alum, 41, instructed E! Information in a phase that aired Wednesday, April 9.
“It’s horrific.”
Again on January 8, Pratt posted harrowing clips of the blaze that destroyed the Pacific Palisades dwelling he shared with spouse Heidi Montag, 38, and their two sons, 7-year-old Gunner and 2-year-old Ryker. And if that wasn’t sufficient heartbreak, his mother and father additionally misplaced their dwelling in the identical hearth.
“My mother’s crying all day lengthy,” Pratt shared. “I don’t assume my mother’s stopped crying.”
Regardless of the devastation, Spencer isn’t one to sit down and sulk. He’s channeling his frustration into gasoline for his subsequent chapter.
“I’m so joyful for her, however I didn’t do that,” he stated of his spouse’s latest musical comeback.
“I’ve been hyping Heidi, and now it’s her time to shine.” Her album Superficial soared to No. 1 on iTunes after the fireplace — proving that even amid ashes, there can nonetheless be a spark.
He’s additionally revving up for his newest TV journey with Hulu’s Bought to Get Out, which drops April 11.
Montag, in the meantime, opened as much as PEOPLE concerning the powerful selections she needed to make whereas evacuating their burning dwelling.
“I used to be actually taking a look at my closet shortly like, ‘What can I seize?’” she stated. Following Spencer’s directions to “seize something you need to preserve,” she snagged a pair of denims, some footwear, and some necessities for the children — together with their beloved bears.
“I’ve no pictures, I’ve no memorabilia. Simply stuff for the children. The whole lot’s gone,” she stated.
The couple later revealed on Good Morning America that they’re beginning over utterly — with no dwelling insurance coverage to fall again on after being dropped from their coverage, like many Californians going through rising premiums.
“We have been ‘home poor’ as they name it,” Heidi defined. “We’ve got a home and every thing else is a hustle, is a grind. So, yeah, we’re undoubtedly counting each greenback that we make.”