Spencer Pratt stands up for Mandy Moore after she was slammed for posting GoFundMe for in-laws amid LA fires
Spencer Pratt has defended Mandy Moore in light of the severe backlash the The Is Us star received after she posted information about a GoFundMe campaign to help her in-laws whose home was destroyed in the devastating Los Angeles fires.
In an angry TikTok, The Hills alum, 41, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, confronted Moore’s opponents head-on.
“Let me tell you about Mandy Moore. Mandy Moore, when I was younger, Mandy Moore shouted out. She booked my hotel for me because she was such a nice friend.”
‘Just as a friend, she booked my hotel in New York – I had never been to New York. I feel like she even booked my flight because I was so much fun to be around. Mandy Moore, I ride for Mandy Moore,” The Princes of Malibu producer said in the clip posted Saturday.
“If I see another TikTok about Mandy Moore and GoFundMes, I’m going to come after you,” he warned.
“You want beef with your worst nightmare, and now that’s me? You post about Mandy Moore. I ride for Mandy Moore.’
Spencer Pratt has defended Mandy Moore in light of the severe backlash the The Is Us star received after she posted information about a GoFundMe campaign to help her in-laws whose home was destroyed in the devastating Los Angeles fires
“Mandy Moore isn’t doing anything wrong, she’s the nicest lady ever.”
“She’s been nice since 2004. If you’re nice in 2004, you’ll still be nice in 2025. I talk so nice. So don’t you dare come and get Mandy Moore.’
“Maybe you’re removing your content about Mandy Moore because Mandy Moore is real,” Pratt claimed.
‘She’s a wonderful person. She doesn’t do anything out of pocket: she sets up GoFundMes, which is great. She doesn’t have to pay for anyone. She has her own life, probably her own children, so don’t come for Mandy Moore.’
The bruhaha started Friday when Moore, 40, posted information about the fundraiser for her brother-in-law Griffin Goldsmith and his wife Kit, launched by Hillary Duff’s husband Matt Koma.
“Griff is a touring musician and has also lost his entire arsenal of drums/percussion that he uses to make a living,” she explained, adding that the couple are expecting their first child in the coming weeks.
In response to the rude comments made by Dr. Death star, she amended the post to tell detractors, “And people who wonder if we help our own family or award any arbitrary amount of money that Google says someone is NOT helpful or empathetic. Of course we are.’
The In Real Life singer, who shares children Gus, almost four, Ozzie, two, and Louise, about four months, with husband Taylor Goldsmith, 39, and had shared the damage to her family’s home in an earlier post, said: “We just lost most of the damage. our lives are also on fire. Please F OFF. no one forces you to do anything.”
“She’s been nice since 2004. If you’re nice in 2004, you’ll still be nice in 2025. I talk so nice. So don’t you dare come and get Mandy Moore. Maybe delete your content about Mandy Moore because Mandy Moore is real,” Pratt claimed in his post
The bruhaha started Friday when Moore posted information about the fundraiser for her brother-in-law Griffin Goldsmith and his wife Kit, launched by Hillary Duff’s husband Matt Koma. By early Sunday, it had raised more than $200,000
Moore and her husband, Dawes frontman Taylor Goldsmith, shared photos of the damage the fire caused to their home, although part of the house survived
In a tearful interview on CNN, Griffin and Kit spoke about the loss of their home, but also their concerns about what would happen to the community they had built around them.
“We, like everyone else in our community, are in truly incredible circumstances,” Goldsmith said.
“I don’t think we’ve had enough time to process what we’re all facing.”
In a tearful interview on CNN, Griffin and Kit Goldsmith, who are expecting their first child, spoke about the loss of their home and the community they had built. “Losing them is almost harder than losing our house because I know we’ll all be scattered from each other.”
“The idea of figuring out where we’re going to be in the next month, where we’re going to have this baby, it’s all very hard to process.”
“We had so many friends there and a huge support group that I really wanted to lean on,” Goldsmith added, before breaking down into sobs.
“Losing them is almost harder than losing our house because I know we’ll all be scattered from each other.”
As of Sunday morning, the GoFundMe had raised more than $200,000 to help the couple get back on their feet.