'The Hills' Alum Spencer Pratt Currently Ranks 2nd Place in Race to Become Los Angeles Mayor

Spencer Pratthas become a strong contender in the race to become the mayor of Los Angeles.

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According to anew poll released by the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairson Friday, April 3, Spencer, 42, has jumped to second place in the survey of preferred candidates.

Incumbent mayorKaren Basscurrently holds the most support from potential voters at 25 per cent while the reality TV star is right behind her at 11 per cent support.

Per the poll, city council memberNithya Ramanis currently in third position, with 9 per cent support.

Spencer Pratt and Sister Stephanie's Ups and Downs Through the Years: 'The Hills' and Mayoral Bid Drama, More

Meanwhile, 40 per cent voters are still undecided before the June 2 primary.

Us Weeklyhas reached out to Spencer for comment.

Spencer announced his political candidacyin January, one year after  he and his wifeHeidi Montaglost their family's homein the Palisades fires that devastated California.

"The system in Los Angeles isn't struggling, it's fundamentally broken," Pratt, 42, said at the "They Let Us Burn" public demonstration on January 7, via theNew York Post."It is a machine designed to protect the people at the top and the friends they exchange favors with while the rest of us drown in toxic smoke and ash. Business as usual is a death sentence for Los Angeles, and I'm done waiting for someone to take real action."

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Pratt continued, "That's why I am running for mayor. And let me be clear, this just isn't a campaign, this is a mission, and we're gonna expose the system."

While Pratt has a substantial number of backers according to the new poll, not everyone supports his bid to become mayor.

In February, his sisterStephanie Pratt,39,urged Los Angeles residents not to vote for himdespite applauding his advocacy effort following the deadly 2026 wildfires.

Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag Sue City of Los Angeles After Losing Home to Wildfires: Report

"Spencer has done great work for the palisades. But LA does not need another unqualified and inexperienced mayor," Stephanie wrote via X on February 14.

"A vote for him is a vote for stupidity," Stephanie continued.

In follow-up posts, Stephanie explained why she wouldn't be voting for her brother to become the new L.A. mayor.

"He's just trying to stay famous and sell his memoir don't be fooled," she wrote. "In an ideal world the palisades would have their own mayor and police department. I would love [for] him to be mayor of [the] Palisades but not LA with 4 million people. I'd be impressed if a republican could turn LA democrats tbh."

She added, "At least hire someone with work experience who wasn't in a cult. I'm WORRIED about LA. I have no problem with Spencer playing government but our city needs help."

‘The Hills’ Alum Spencer Pratt Currently Ranks 2nd Place in Race to Become Los Angeles Mayor

Spencer Pratthas become a strong contender in the race to become the mayor of Los Angeles. According to anew p...
Meghan Markle Reacts After Her 'Suits' Costar Patrick J. Adams Speaks About Her on Podcast

Meghan Marklehas responded after her formerSuitslove interestPatrick J. Adamsspoke about her on a recent podcast.

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After Adams, 44, shared that he never received any of Duchess of Sussex's famous As Ever jam while appearing on the "Not Skinny But Not Fat," podcast on Tuesday, March 31, Meghan responded two days later.

Postingvia the comments sectionof the "Not Skinny But Not Fat" Instagram account, Meghan, 44,  said she was rectifying Adam's lack of jam situation immediately.

"Jams en route for you @patrickjadams & @sleepinthegardn," Meghan wrote, tagging the actor and his wife,Troian Bellisario.

Patrick J. Adams Jokes About 'Suits' Finding Netflix Success Due to Meghan Markle and Prince Harry

Meghan also sent well wishes to other members of Adams' family via the rare public comment.

"Hugs to those beautiful babies. Send my love to your mom ❤️," Meghan added, referencing Adam and Bellisario's three daughters, Aurora, 7, Elliot, 4, and Imogen, 2 months, as well as the actor's mother.

During the podcast episode, Adam disclosed that he "did not get a jam" when Meghan's brand, As Ever, was launched despite starring alongside her for years on the legal drama.

"I didn't get anything," he joked. "I don't have enough followers, I don't think."

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Podcast hostAmanda Hirschadmitted that she had been one of the recipients of Meghan's jam but explained she hadn't tasted it yet as she's preserving it in the box.

"You're treating it like a champagne?" Adams asked. "It's gonna go bad," he added. "How long do preserves last? It's going to go bad."

Adams played Mike Ross inSuitsfrom 2011 to 2018. His character struck up a romance with colleague Rachel Zane, portrayed by Meghan.

They both leftSuitsafter the show's seventh season and Meghan quit acting to join the British Royal Family full time. Meghan and her husbandPrince Harrymarried in 2018 and announced they were stepping back from royal duties in January 2020. (The couple also share two children, Prince Archie, 6, and Princess Lilibet, 4.)

Meghan Markle Sent Patrick J. Adams a 'Lovely Text' About His 'Suits' Rewatch Podcast

During Tuesday's podcast, Adams also explained why he's been protective over his former costar amid her romance with Harry.

"What she's gone through is insane," he said. Adams also referenced his Instagram bio — which reads, "The other guy from that show that you're watching on that app because that girl married that prince."

"I've got to change that," Adams said. "It's the sort of thing that wherever Meghan is, if she's ever read that, she's going, 'Patrick, give me a break'."

Adams added, "I got a lot of eye rolls — that was a constant with Meghan."

Meghan Markle Reacts After Her ‘Suits’ Costar Patrick J. Adams Speaks About Her on Podcast

Meghan Marklehas responded after her formerSuitslove interestPatrick J. Adamsspoke about her on a recent podcast. ...

Although the Rorschach inkblot test isn't considered the most scientifically reliable today, it remains one of the most fascinating psychological tests ever created. People are naturally drawn to abstract images, and the question "what do you see?" What you notice may say something about how you think, interpret the world, and even how your imagination works.

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“What Do You See First?”: 22 Abstract Rorschach Inkblots For You To Vote On

Although the Rorschach inkblot test isn't considered the most scientifically reliable today, it remains one of the mo...
As Trump orders UFO data released, a question hangs: If aliens exist, what would they think of us?

For generations, human beings have wondered: What would alien life from another planet be like? But we rarely ask the opposite: What would they think of us?

Associated Press FILE - A patron passes a painting inside the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, N.M., on June 10, 1997. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File) FILE - Model ships hang at the entrance to the Star Trek Experience at the Las Vegas Hilton in Las Vegas on Aug. 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken, File) FILE - Gen. John FILE - Memorabilia is displayed at Christie's auction house in New York on Oct. 5, 2006, as a three-day sale of over 1,000 items from FILE - A pedestrian passes by life-size models of characters FILE - A visitor walks past a line of posters for the forthcoming film This image released by Universal Pictures shows Emily Blunt in a scene from FILE - Harvard physicist Avi Loeb, left, listens as former NASA astronaut Dr. Mae C. Jemison, speaks during a press conference in New York on April 12, 2016. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)

What on Earth

It's a question that can produce some, well, uncomfortable answers if you happen to be an earthling.

"If I were looking at Earth from a distance, I would be pretty disappointed," theoretical physicist Avi Loeb says. "Most of our investing is dealing with conflicts to prevent other people from killing us or us killing others. Look at the Ukraine war over a little bit of territory. That is not a sign of intelligence."

The debate on whether little green men or UFOs are among us escalated in February when former President Barack Obama, responding to a podcaster's question, said aliens are "real," but he "hasn't seen them" and "they're not being kept at Area 51." President Donald Trump laterannounced on social mediathat he was directing release of government files because of "tremendous interest."

Stepped-up interest in UFOs also is swirling as the United States heads back toward the moon with Wednesday's launch ofNASA's Artemis IImission. The four astronauts aboard will do a fly-around of the moon before returning to Earth.

In a world riven by war, civil unrest, climate change and divisiveness, it's easy to wonder what newcomers to Planet Earth might make of us and our struggles. Whatever the case, well over a majority of Americans echo the sentiment of the slogan from "The X-Files": "The truth is out there."

A 2021 surveyconducted by the Pew Research Center showed about two-thirds of Americans said their best guess is that intelligent life exists on other planets. About half of U.S. adults said UFOs reported by people in the military are "definitely" or "probably" evidence of intelligent life outside Earth.

"We don't want to think this is the only place in this extraordinarily and incomprehensibly large universe where life and intelligence and even technology have emerged," says Bill Diamond, president and chief executive of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California.

"It sort of says about humans, 'We don't want to be alone.'"

Something is up there. But what?

Americans have been fascinated by the thought of life outside this planet following the recovery of debris in 1947 near Roswell, New Mexico. The military initially said the material was from a flying disc, only to reverse course and tell the public it was from a weather balloon.

Hollywood ran with it. Flying saucers, little green men and eventually humanoid gray aliens became part of popular culture. April 5 even is celebrated annually throughout the iconic "Star Trek" franchise as "First Contact Day" to mark the date in 2063 when humankind, in "Trek" canon, first made contact with Vulcans.

Much in the popular culture suggests any aliens might be aggressive. Priscilla Wald, who teaches about science fiction at Duke University, has a theory as to why.

"It seems to me it's a reflection on who we are, that we're projecting onto aliens the way we treat each other," Wald says. "So the aliens are coming down, they want to conquer us, they're violent. Who does that sound like? It sounds like us."

In 2024,the Pentagon released hundreds of reportsof unidentified and unexplained aerial phenomena. However, thatreviewgave no indications that their origins were extraterrestrial.

On two separate occasions, Debbie Dmytro saw things in the sky over Michigan's southern Oakland County. The greenish object Dmytro says she saw March 1 in the sky over Royal Oak, Michigan, looked like neither plane nor helicopter. Dmytro, a 56-year-old medical professional, acknowledges that it could have been some type of commercial or delivery drone.

What she saw in 2023 in the same general area north of Detroit is not so easily explained.

"Four yellow lights, yellowish golden lights and they were all flying very, very low," Dmytro remembers. She says the lights were about 100 feet (30 meters) up at their nearest.

"I've never seen anything so low without any noise and flying in complete uniformity," she says. "Is it something man-made? Is it something that's not manmade? Who knows?"

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Who knows indeed? UFOs, the term for unidentified flying objects, has in recent years given way to UAP — unidentified aerial phenomena or unidentified anomalous phenomena.

"Absolutely, there are such things" as UAPs and UFOs, says Diamond, whose SETI — Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence — seeks to explore, search and understand the nature of life and intelligence in the universe.

"People observe things in the sky that they can't immediately identify or recognize as either human engineering such as planes or drones or helicopters, or animals, such as birds, and therefore they don't know what they are," Diamond says.

Time for the truth

Like so many, Dmytro wants to know what the government knows. "I think there's more information out there. I'm open to learning more," she says. "I have an open mind. It's always about scientific proof."

Retired Rear Adm. Timothy Gallaudet says evidence clearly shows there are UAP zipping around the airspace and in the oceans.

"The nonhuman intelligence that operates them or controls them are absolutely real," Gallaudet says. "We've recovered crashed craft. We don't know if they're extraterrestrial in origin."

Gallaudet worked as acting administrator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He participated in a 2024 congressional hearing on UAP disclosure and says the release of government files promised by Trump is something people find of interest. He just hopes the president follows through.

There are billions of galaxies in the universe and each has billions of stars, so the likelihood life developed elsewhere is fairly high, according to University of Michigan Astronomy Professor Edwin Bergin, who teaches about looking for life elsewhere. He believes that if intelligent beings navigated vast distances to reach Earth they would make themselves known — despite humanity's penchant for creating chaos.

"I would think that they would look at us like we were crazy ... but they would come out," he says. "I mean, why come here otherwise unless you're going to sit and observe."

Loeb, director of the Institute for Theory & Computation at Harvard and head of the university's Galileo Project for the Systematic Scientific Search for Evidence of Extraterrestrial Technological Artifacts, believes in the likely existence of extraterrestrials.

"They might be laughing at us," he says. "They might be watching us ... to make sure we will not become predators, that we will not become dangerous to them."

In the interest of national security

Much of the government's secrecy around UFOs and UAP is tied to national security concerns, according to Diamond.

"We have pretty advanced technologies, satellite, ground-based that are for various purposes mostly national security and defense that are pointing at the sky or things on board aircraft," Diamond says. "Sometimes these pick up objects. The technology behind it is sensitive and protected."

Government data, including a "trove " of UAP video the Navy is sitting on, should be shared with scientists for research and a better understanding of the characteristics of the objects, says Gallaudet, who spent 32 years in the Navy and viewed classified UAP video.

"When you look at these things in our airspace having near collisions with our aircraft, that's a real valid concern," he says. "We are just not sure of what they are and what they intend to do with their interaction with humanity. That could be a national security threat, or not."

"When has ignorance ever been a good national strategy?" Gallaudet asks. "Whether it be scary, harmful or not, or a mix, I think seeking the truth is in our best interest."

Meanwhile, Diamond doesn't think any "true alien encounter could be kept secret."

"If any civilization has mastered interstellar travel, they have technology and capabilities beyond our wildest comprehension," he says. "If they want to interact, they will; if they don't, they won't. If they want to be seen, they will be, and if not, they won't be!"

As Trump orders UFO data released, a question hangs: If aliens exist, what would they think of us?

For generations, human beings have wondered: What would alien life from another planet be like? But we rarely ask the opp...

 

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