Hilary Duff Opens Home to Mandy Moore & Family
Attributing some arbitrary amount of money google says someone has is NOT helpful or empathetic,” The “This Is Us” actress wrote on Instagram Thursday.
Mandy Moore is clapping back at the critics. The actress, 40, is responding to those criticizing her for sharing a GoFundMe for her family members who were affected by the Los Angeles fires.
In an Instagram post shared Tuesday, Moore's brother-in-law Griffin Goldsmith, whose home also burned down from the fires, expressed gratitude to Duff and her family for their generosity.
On the heels of NCIS announcing a delay in production due to the tragic LA wildfires, former spinoff star Eric Christian Olsen shared that he lost his home to them and is staying with family. Following the actor's tragic life update, his post brought in an outpouring of support from Wilmer Valderrama, Mandy Moore, and many others in Hollywood.
Mandy Moore and her family resides in the Altadena region of Los Angeles, California. There is a report that is doing rounds claiming that Mandy and her family has sought shelter with Hilary Duff and her husband Matthew Koma.
Mandy Moore visited her family home in Altadena, California after it was ravaged by a wildfire. The singer and actress said on Instagram that they were able to park on their street and walk to their home to see the extent of loss.
"This is the kindest act any human could do for another." Mandy Moore's family was among the long list of people who have lost almost everything to the wildfires in California, with the actress revealing that her home had not survived in an emotional post shared to her Instagram on January 8.
Mandy Moore, Anna Faris, Milo Ventimiglia, Paris Hilton, Jeff Bridges, Bozoma Saint John, Mel Gibson, Billy Crystal and Diane Warren are among the celebrities whose houses were destroyed by the blazes.
Historic landmarks by the likes of Myron Hunt and Elmer Grey and a noted Midcentury retreat by architect Ray Kappe have been lost. Here's our residential architecture list, to be updated regularly.
LA cannot go forward with the status quo. LA is no longer what it was. It has to be different,’ Maria Shriver writes on X.
Fires burning homes and businesses in Los Angeles for a week have killed at least 24 people, displaced thousands of others and destroyed more than 12,000 buildings in what might be the most expensive set of conflagrations in the nation's history.