Andorran Satirist Carolina Alarcón Goes Viral with Housing Crisis Song
Shy resident's AI-generated *Roband* song, critiquing Andorra's housing woes, racks up 50K+ Instagram views and sparks shares of personal struggles.
Key Points
- *Roband* song gains 50K Instagram, 12K TikTok views using AI production.
- Critiques housing crisis as normalized 'structured violence' eroding lives.
- Viewers share private stories of evictions, financial strain, and burnout.
- Alarcón plans occasional personal videos, no influencer ambitions.
Carolina Alarcón, a shy Andorran resident, has captured widespread attention with her satirical social media videos critiquing the country's acute housing crisis. Her latest creation, a song titled *Roband*, has gone viral, racking up over 50,000 views on Instagram, 12,000 on TikTok, and growing numbers elsewhere.
Alarcón began posting the homemade clips to challenge what she sees as the normalization of housing woes—a situation she describes as "structured violence" that quietly erodes lives. "They whisper to you: 'Don't worry, we'll give you a shitty life,' or 'Don't worry, we'll kick you out of your home, but it's fine,'" she told *Altaveu*. The everyday drama of struggling to find affordable rentals, make ends meet, or plan for the future fuels her outrage, but she delivers the message through humour to avoid alienating viewers. "We live the drama daily," she explained. "Pointing fingers angrily creates backlash, but calm humour lets people see it differently."
The *Roband* song, which she produced using artificial intelligence tools since she has no musical training, amplifies that frustration. Alarcón wrote the lyrics herself, drawing from personal anxiety—like counting down to 2027, when her own time in Andorra might end. Its success surprised her: viewers not only watch but share it privately via WhatsApp, sing along, and open up about their hidden struggles. "I'm discovering a very sad story about Andorra," she said. "I knew housing was a serious issue, but I didn't expect it to be this beastly." Messages reveal widespread resignation—people skipping activities to cover basics, losing sleep over evictions, or feeling trapped without roots.
Friends and family, initially taken aback by her bold online persona, have rallied behind her, with some offering practical help like holding the camera. Earlier videos targeting urban development projects also resonated, prompting private encouragement.
Alarcón has no plans to professionalize or become an influencer. She will keep using her personal account for occasional videos when inspiration strikes, starting with a full version of *Roband* as promised to followers. Criticism doesn't faze her. "My videos aren't attacks—they express what I feel and what many in the country feel," she said. "When people see no future, everyone's burnt out." She brushes off potential backlash, focusing instead on giving voice to collective discomfort in a nation where housing pressures force quiet endurance.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: