It’s been greater than a decade since The Hills took its closing bow, however it looms giant in the annals of actuality TV historical past — particularly as a result of of its iconic finale.
After years of rumors that the present was scripted, Kristin Cavallari and Brody Jenner gave a playful nod to the hypothesis in the closing minutes of the MTV sequence. After Cavallari, now 36, stated goodbye to Jenner, 40, the digital camera pulled again to disclose that the Hollywood check in the distance was only a backdrop — and the duo had been filming on a set.
“I actually don’t remember this scene,” Cavallari recalled throughout an unique interview for Us Weekly’s newest cowl story. “This is really like I’m seeing it for the first time.”
Cavallari gamely agreed to reenact the closing scene with Us, and ultimately, her reminiscence began to return. “God, that’s so funny,” she stated. “Is this when we’re standing outside of the car? It all came flooding back.”
She additionally recreated her blowout season 5 struggle with Stephanie Pratt and Audrina Patridge, which she assured Us was “not scripted” regardless of the sequence finale’s nod to the artifice concerned in producing The Hills.
“I’ll give you the backstory on this one,” Cavallari stated of the heated dialog, which confirmed Pratt, 37, arguing about Audrina Patridge’s off-and-on boyfriend Justin “Bobby” Brescia. “This was my first real scene filming for The Hills, and Audrina and I talked prior to this. We kept saying, ‘We know the producers want us to fight. We’re not falling for that. We’re not doing it.’”
Drama discovered the pair anyway when Pratt confronted Cavallari for talking to Brescia, 41. “They started coming at me for talking to Justin, and I was like, ‘What?’ So, we just had this conversation,” Cavallari recalled. “I was like, ‘I thought we were buddies. What?’ And we had a bottle of tequila also, which didn’t help.”
While Cavallari is blissful to revisit her actuality TV days, she’s now gearing up for the launch of her new podcast, “Let’s Be Honest With Kristin Cavallari,” which debuts on September 12.
“Since I first started on TV at 17, my image has been controlled to a degree,” she defined to Us. “So, this is the first thing I’ve done where I’m like, ‘This is the real me for the first time in my entire career. I’m in a really good place in my life, and I feel like I can finally open that door and let people in.’”
For extra with Cavallari, watch the video above and choose up the new concern of Us Weekly, on stands now.
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