Spencer Pratt calls Hills castmates 'worst people ever' amid sobriety row

They're the worst people ever. No apologies, no accountability.
Spencer Pratt's response when asked if castmates had apologized for how they treated him and Heidi.

Within the manufactured intimacy of reality television, old wounds rarely stay closed — and Spencer Pratt's latest public grievances against his Hills castmates remind us how fame, perceived slights, and the hunger for relevance can calcify into something resembling genuine enmity. What began as an offhand remark about a colleague's sobriety has unraveled into a broader reckoning about belonging, loyalty, and who controls the narrative. The cameras roll on, indifferent to the human cost of the spectacle they capture.

  • Spencer Pratt's social media declarations that his castmates are 'the worst people ever' have reignited long-simmering tensions within The Hills ensemble, leaving little ambiguity about where he stands.
  • A group murder mystery game became the unlikely flashpoint when Jason and Ashley Wahler tried to confront Spencer directly about his comments questioning Jason's sobriety — a conversation Spencer refused to have.
  • Brody Jenner's decision to relay Spencer's doubts about Wahler's sobriety to Jason and Justin Bobby effectively lit the fuse, turning private skepticism into a very public confrontation.
  • Spencer and Heidi walked out of the room mid-confrontation, and rather than seek reconciliation, Spencer retreated to social media to validate his grievances and embrace fan theories about castmate jealousy.
  • With Pratt showing no appetite for dialogue and the cast fractures deepening on camera, the season appears headed toward division rather than resolution.

Spencer Pratt has never been known for restraint, and the current season of The Hills has offered him fresh cause for complaint. Taking to social media, he has been vocal about feeling mistreated by his castmates alongside wife Heidi Montag, dismissing any apologies that came his way and labeling his co-stars in the harshest possible terms.

The breaking point came during filming, when comments Pratt had made about castmate Jason Wahler's sobriety reached the Wahlers' ears — partly through Brody Jenner, who had passed Spencer's doubts along to Jason and Justin Bobby. During a group murder mystery game, Jason and his wife Ashley tried to address the matter with Spencer directly. He refused to engage, showed no interest in explaining himself, and when the exchange grew heated, he and Heidi walked out entirely.

Online, Pratt has been more expansive. When fans suggested his castmates were jealous of 'Speidi's' enduring fame and larger-than-life personalities, he agreed without hesitation, leaning into the idea that the cast had been working to push him and Heidi to the margins.

The couple — married since 2008 and long established as a package deal in the reality television world — have always courted controversy, and Pratt's combative temperament has been central to his public identity for years. But the current rift feels less like performance and more like genuine fracture. With no meaningful dialogue on the horizon and grievances being litigated in public rather than in person, the question hanging over the rest of the season is whether any of these relationships can be salvaged at all.

Spencer Pratt has never been one to keep quiet when he feels wronged, and the latest season of The Hills has given him plenty of material to work with. The reality television star, who rose to fame alongside his wife Heidi Montag on the original series, has taken to social media in recent weeks to air grievances about how he and Heidi have been treated by their castmates. When a fan asked whether any of his co-stars had apologized for their behavior toward the couple, Pratt's response was unambiguous: they are, in his view, "the worst people ever."

The tension boiled over during filming of the show's second season, particularly around comments Pratt made regarding castmate Jason Wahler's sobriety. The situation came to a head during a group murder mystery game, when Ashley and Jason attempted to address the matter directly with Spencer and Heidi. Pratt's reaction was dismissive from the start. He refused to engage with them, telling Ashley flatly that he had no interest in talking and saw no reason to explain himself. When pressed, he doubled down on his original statement, saying he had questioned whether Wahler was actually maintaining sobriety, noting that his exact words were about uncertainty regarding Wahler's status.

The confrontation escalated quickly. Brody had previously revealed to Jason and Justin Bobby that Spencer had cast doubt on Wahler's sobriety, setting the stage for the explosive encounter. What began as an attempt at dialogue devolved into a heated argument between the Wahlers and the Pratts, ending with Spencer and Heidi walking out of the room entirely. The incident left little room for reconciliation.

On social media, Pratt has been more forthcoming about his perspective. When fans suggested that his castmates were jealous of him and Heidi—pointing out that the couple had built a following over the years and possessed what the fan called "personalities"—Pratt agreed emphatically. He seemed to embrace the narrative that the cast had deliberately tried to push him and his wife out of the spotlight, a claim that resonates with his public grievances.

Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag, often referred to as "Speidi," have been fixtures in reality television since their original run on The Hills. They married in 2008, though their relationship has been marked by turbulence over the years. Pratt himself has a well-documented reputation for his volatile temperament, a trait that has defined much of his public persona. Even their appearance together on Celebrity Big Brother in January 2013 as a single contestant underscored their status as a package deal in the entertainment world.

The current feud reflects deeper fractures within the cast as the show continues. Pratt's refusal to engage in genuine conversation, combined with his willingness to air complaints publicly, suggests that whatever damage has been done may not be easily repaired. The question now is whether the season will see any attempt at bridge-building, or whether these divisions will only deepen as filming continues.

No, they're the worst people ever
— Spencer Pratt, responding to a fan asking if castmates had apologized
I'm not talking to these two... I don't want to talk and I don't need to have a reason
— Spencer Pratt, during confrontation with Ashley and Jason Wahler
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

What actually happened with Jason Wahler? Did Spencer say something he shouldn't have?

Model

He questioned whether Jason was actually staying sober. Not in a gentle way—more like he was casting doubt on the whole thing. When Jason and Ashley tried to talk to him about it, Spencer just shut them down.

Inventor

And that's what set off the whole "worst people ever" comment?

Model

That's part of it. But Spencer seems to think it goes deeper—that the cast has been trying to push him and Heidi out because they're jealous. He's not apologizing for what he said about Jason. He's angry that nobody's apologizing to him.

Inventor

Does he have a point? Are they actually jealous?

Model

That's the thing—we're only hearing Spencer's side. He and Heidi do have a following, and they've stayed relevant. But whether that means the cast is deliberately excluding them or just tired of the drama is hard to say from the outside.

Inventor

Why does Spencer refuse to actually talk to them about it?

Model

He says he doesn't need a reason. He just doesn't want to engage. It's his pattern—he gets defensive, shuts down conversation, and then complains about being treated badly. It's a cycle.

Inventor

Is there any chance this gets resolved?

Model

Not if Spencer keeps refusing to sit down and actually listen. You can't rebuild trust by calling people "the worst people ever" on Twitter and then walking out of rooms.

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