Olandria Carthen, Bama Barbie, Black homeownership, Tuskegee University, Black women homeowners, reality star homeowner, thegrio.com
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 07: Olandria Carthen attends Annual Fifteen Percent Pledge Fundraising Gala Honoring Ms. Tina Knowles at Paramount Studios on February 07, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Savion Washington/Getty Images)Photo by: Savion Washington / Getty Images

The reality star and Tuskegee University alum marked the milestone with roses, champagne, and a reminder that Black women’s wins deserve to be celebrated out loud.

Olandria Carthen is stepping into a new era, and this one comes with keys.

The reality TV star, influencer, and rising model shared on May 8 that she is officially a homeowner. In a carousel posted to Instagram, Carthen celebrated the milestone from inside her new home with all the glam her supporters have come to expect from the woman affectionately known as the Bama Barbie.

“Built for the life I imagined,” she captioned the post, adding champagne emojis and a reference to Psalm 23:5.

The moment was polished, personal and very much on brand. In the photos, Carthen posed throughout the home in a fitted gray sleeveless mock-neck top, black capri leggings and pointed black heels. The celebration also included oversized “HOME” balloons, champagne glasses, a floral arrangement spelling out “SOLD” in red roses and a pink heart-covered cake that read “Penthouselandria.”

Fans and celebrity friends quickly flooded the comments with congratulations. Coco Gauff, Skai Jackson and singer Jeremih were among those showing love, with Jeremih calling the moment “PENTHOUSE HER.”

But beyond the aesthetics, Carthen’s homeownership milestone lands as something bigger than a pretty Instagram post.

For many Black families, buying a home is not just about having a place to live. It is tied to stability, legacy, wealth-building and the kind of security generations before us were often denied. Even as Black homeownership has grown, the gap remains stark. The National Association of Realtors reported that the Black homeownership rate was 44.7% in 2023, compared with 72.4% for white households. The organization also noted that the Black-white homeownership gap has widened over the past decade.

That context is why moments like this resonate. When a young Black woman publicly celebrates buying a home, especially at a time when affordability, interest rates and housing access remain real barriers, it is more than celebrity news. It is a visible reminder of what it looks like to dream, work and build.

Carthen has been steadily expanding her platform beyond reality television. She is a first-generation college graduate of Tuskegee University, where she studied supply chain management, and previously worked in the elevator and escalator industry before rising to broader visibility.

Now, with brand deals, modeling opportunities, red carpet appearances and viral social media moments behind her, Carthen has added another title to her growing résumé: homeowner.

And honestly, that deserves the champagne, the flowers, the cake and every congratulatory comment.