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Hills Salaries Exposed
As the hit MTV show returns, Nicole LaPorte exclusively uncovers payday drama: Kristin makes $90,000 per episode compared to Spencer's $65,000 and Audrina's $100,000. Plus, Spencer spills on his co-stars and view our gallery of reality TV salaries.
As of Tuesday, as any tween worth their Juicy Couture jeans will tell you, “The bitch is back”—i.e., Kristin Cavallari is joining the MTV docusoap The Hills as its resident diva. She’s replacing Lauren Conrad, who’s been the good-girl star of the series until she started complaining of Hills fatigue and decided, after five seasons, to leave.
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It won’t be Cavallari’s first reality-TV stint (hence, why she’s “back.”). Her fangs were first bared on Laguna Beach, the precursor to The Hills, which followed Conrad and her posse of hot and fabulous friends when they were “regular” high-school students in a town that makes Malibu look like the slums.
The Hills, which debuted in 2006, caught up with Conrad when she moved to Los Angeles and found a new group of hot and fabulous friends—including the infamous, and beyond blond, Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt, aka “Speidi,” as the tabloids have anointed the couple—whose lives are just as surreal: Despite entry-level jobs in fashion and media, they all live in opulent apartments, drive fancy cars, and eat out at chic restaurants. Oh—and they can afford plastic surgery. (Think Sex and the City for the barely legal.)
The show has catapulted its stars into the limelight, to the point that Montag and Pratt authored the about-to-be-published book How to Be Famous, for which, Pratt said: “I lived the research.”
In response to a recent speech President Obama delivered to schoolkids, saying, “I know that sometimes you get the sense from TV that you can be rich and successful without any hard work,” Pratt said, referring to his book: “Well, guess what, Obama? We have made it quite easier!”
After Laguna Beach ended, Cavallari tried to leverage her own 15 minutes into something more: becoming a “real” actress. But that didn’t pan out as planned—most of the roles she landed were in direct-to-DVD releases, such as Van Wilder: Freshman Year—and so now she’s returning to reality TV. Through her publicist, Cavallari declined to comment.
The move may seem counterintuitive, or like a kind of consolation prize. But that’s hardly the case, considering that MTV is so desperate to keep The Hills—its highest-rated show by a mile—alive and thriving that it’s shelling out major dough to the cast, marking a paradigm shift in the business: Reality TV as the cheap alternative to scripted programming? Not anymore.
Cavallari is being paid $90,000 an episode, which is almost as much as Conrad was making: $125,000 an episode (or $2.5 million a year), according to a person with knowledge of the show’s contracts. Conrad’s deal stipulated that no other star’s salary could match hers while she was on The Hills, but those of supporting cast members Audrina Patridge, Lauren “Lo” Bosworth, and Montag come close: $100,000 a show. As for Pratt, his rate is a slightly less at $65,000 per show, because he only joined as a regular in 2008. (In comparison, the stars of The Real Housewives series receive a reported $30,000 a show.) In the case of Brody Jenner, Conrad’s BFFWB (Best Friend Forever With Benefits), he takes in $45,000.
And that’s just what they get paid for doing their day job. The Hills and its stars have become such a name brand—in certain circles—that Cavallari and Co. receive between $20,000 and $25,000 for personal appearances—which last no more than two hours—at events such as club and gallery openings, according to Mike Esterman, a celebrity booking agent. When Speidi showed up at a Valentine’s Day gala in Las Vegas, Pratt and Montag each took home $30,000. And Montag’s recent Playboy cover shoot—she graced the September issue of the magazine—earned her $375,000 plus a generous chunk of royalties, despite the fact that she didn’t take it all off.










I am deeply saddened that someone has taken the time to research and report on this non-story. This belongs in People, not on this site.
I agree wholeheartedly.
Deeply saddened ... because someone wrote an entertainment piece in the Sexy Beast section ... how do you feel when you lose your puppy ?
Sorry, this is not a non-story. Believe it or not, this has huge implications in the battle of scripted versus non-scripted television. Unions, costs, credits. Trust me there are quite a few people in Los Angeles freaking out right about now. And it's not because they ran out of their prescriptions.
I disagree. I found this article intresting. As a person who works with teenagers these are people they look up to. To realize you can make so much money doing nothing or in some cases just sad behavior is a a sign of our values as a society.
Is it just me, or does anybody think that Spencer is straight? He's got pillow-biter written all over him.
I'm with you. He strikes me as gay, gay, gay.
silly boys. no one that douchey is gay.
and if he were, he would've chosen a beard who is far less annoying and stupid than heidi.
Gawd, Spencer's an @ss.
This is a very sick society with this crap happening.
I love how it said Heidi has released two singles. Released them to who? I've never heard them played and only heard them talked about when people have been wragging on them in blogs. Released. That's rich.
I expected better from Tina Brown. Perhaps the world has finally, finally run out of actual famous people, and we're left with these scraps of DNA.
Oh - I am dying to know. How much does Tiffany Pollard of I love New York make?
These are non-people......Creating stories about them only makes them more existent. Maybe they all can just go away and live in a sewer drain where they belong.
While the insight on their salaries was good...why is Spencer Pratt the only contact??
I think what Spencer is missing is that the President defines being "successful" as something a bit more lofty than whoring your image on television and in tabloids for cash.
This website sucks!
this entire post explains why we are completely awash in decadence and unseriousness. No wonder Sarah Palin thinks she is owed becoming President.
Thank you.
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