Heidi Montag's "Superficial" album and songs have made $150,000 after her and Spencer Pratt's home burned down in the wildfires, Billboard estimates.
Surprise! As a special thank you for all the love and support, and for making my dream of being a @billboard charting artist come true, here is SUPERFICIAL 2! It's Superficial…but it has 12 NEW NEW songs, so it's not! Buy & Stream now!🔮✨️ #Superficial2 … pic.twitter.com/R9YTwY7nxF
Forget the hankies, bring the slapstick, say ad mavens who expect a non-controversial crop of ads in Super Bowl 59.
Heidi Montag has dropped a surprise new album, Superficial 2.. When she revealed the news, she shared her thanks for the support that she and Spencer Pratt have received since losing their home in the Los Angeles wildfires earlier this month.
In a lecture at VMX, Jason B. Pieper, DVM, MS, DACVD, outlined the next steps in the treatment of pyoderma in dogs when the infection is non-responsive to topical therapy
Tired, lonely parents struggle with superficial family discipleship programs. But by caring for parents’ faith, the church cares for the whole family.
The ambitious “Emilia Pérez” and its star-studded cast met with a fizzle at the box office and mounting criticisms that it was a not-so-faithful portrayal of Mexico that glamorizes the violence
Jason B. Pieper, DVM, MS, DACVD, talked about pyoderma, including ingredients and formulations, in his lecture at the 2025 Veterinary Meeting & Expo
Heidi Montag's Superficial sold a little more than 11,200 copies in the U.S., up 224,000% from the week before, making the decade-plus-old title a hit for the first time.
And the lower cost of producing these lightweight cells, printed on flexible plastic, means that manufacturing can remain in the United States, an advantage that even President Trump should welcome. Installation will be simpler and cheaper, and the cells are appropriate for a larger range of surfaces, allowing for broader use.
Wes Streeting's plan to bring down waiting lists by shifting care out of hospital make superficial sense, but if GPs are going to shoulder more of the burden they need the resources to do it
“Over the past few years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain,” Nicholas Carr wrote in 2008, “remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory. My mind isn’t going—so far as I can tell—but it’s changing. I’m not thinking the way I used to think.”