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LA Mayoral Candidate Spencer Pratt Releases Viral ad Showing Mansions of CA Politicians
The 30-second spot has 1.6 million views and frames Bass and Raman as symbols of wealthy political leadership.
- On social media, Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt released a viral ad showcasing the mansions of local politicians, including Mayor Bass and Los Angeles City Council Nithya Raman.
- A former MTV "The Hills" reality star, Pratt announced his candidacy on the anniversary of the Palisades Fire, contrasting his trailer residence against the luxury homes of city officials.
- Featuring a $3 million mansion Pratt attributes to Raman, the ad contrasts that with footage of homeless encampments to emphasize "the consequences of failed leadership" he claims officials ignore.
- Following the video's release, it has reached 1.6 million views on X, and TMZ reported last week that Los Angeles Lakers controlling owner Jeanie Buss donated to the campaign.
- Despite being a registered Republican, Pratt told Politico that party labels do not matter in his bid for mayor, describing the contest as a "nonpartisan" race.
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GOP Mayoral Candidate Releases Brilliant Ad Exposing Corrupt California Democrats Mansions
Louder with Crowder every weekday at 11:00 AM Eastern, only on Rumble Premium!They not like us pic.twitter.com/78hducHDUE— Spencer Pratt (@spencerpratt) April 29, 2026 While Karen Bass traveled abroad when many Los Angeles residents saw their homes and neighborhoods burn to the ground, she did not have to suffer. Her mansion still stands tall, while she makes everyone else's life extremely difficult to rebuild. It has been over a year since one …
Spencer Pratt's LA mayoral campaign video draws John Wick comparisons as fans rally behind him
Spencer Pratt released a campaign video for his LA mayoral race, drawing comparisons to John Wick online after highlighting failed leadership during the Palisades fire.
·New York, United States
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Total News Sources26
Leaning Left1Leaning Right21Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution84% Right
Bias Distribution
- 84% of the sources lean Right
84% Right
12%
R 84%
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