Spencer Pratt Sports Heidis Face on Campaign Trail

Spencer Pratt Sports Heidis Face on Campaign Trail

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knows how to hustle in the realm of reality television and social media and now he's taking his talent all the way to the mayoral race.

The former star of The Hills was seen jostling for signatures on LA's Ventura Boulevard on Wednesday and made sure to include his wife – on his shirt, that is.

Pratt, 42, sported a black T-shirt imprinted with an eye-catching photo of his wife striking a beauty queen pose in a sparkly tiara.

He managed to grab a few interested persons to the table and spoke with some of them, gesturing with his arms and plastering a big friendly smile on his face.

Pratt also took to his X account to share a video of himself in the parking lot and trying to be charming to passers-by on foot and in cars, saying he needed signatures and 'LA addresses' to get on the ballot and win the on June 2.

'We're still here, 18065 Ventura Boulevard, pull up, come give a signature,' pleaded Pratt, whose

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Spencer Pratt wore a T-shirt imprinted with a photo of his wife Heidi Montag as he tried to coax passers-by to give their signatures so he can get on the ballot for the LA mayoral race

The former star of The Hills managed to grab a few interested persons to the table and spoke with some of them while plastering a big friendly smile on his face

Pratt stopped mid-sentence to coax a motorist to pull over and add his moniker to the list, but was unsuccessful.

The TV personality announced his run for the LA mayor's office on January 7 during a They Let Us Burn! Protest in Pacific Palisades near the remains of Pratt and Montag's home in which they hoped to raise their two sons, Gunner, eight, and Ryker, three.

that they were unable to afford reconstructing their residence and were now 'kind of displaced.'

'Unfortunately for rebuilding, we just don't have the finances. We barely could pay the mortgage on that house,' Montag said.

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'We spent our whole careers to put a down payment on it. So we're unfortunately in a place where we aren't looking to rebuild and we're not really sure where to go. We're kind of displaced at the moment.

'A lot of the community is in the same position, and that's just unfortunate. People don't realize that a lot of people can't rebuild. A lot of families bought their houses 40 or 50 years ago when it was a much cheaper part of LA,' she maintained.

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