Fantasia talks about nearly losing her homes

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- There is harmony once again in Fantasia Barrino's Charlotte house -- the one she shares with her mom, her young daughter and many other family members.
That harmony is, in part, from Barrino herself. She and her mom often break out into song.
But the harmony was hard to hear this time last year.
"I feel like I overcame a lot of things," Barrino said. "It's very hard as a young woman to feel like they're actually coming to take away my home that my family lives in."
The "American Idol" winner says she was just a day away from losing both of the south Charlotte homes she owns.
"I put my life in other people's hands that didn't quite take care of it like I would have," she said.
She says she always had the money, and when a judge realized that the near foreclosures -- and the people she used to have working for her -- went away.
"I put my trust in other men -- people that said they cared about me, that they said they loved me, that they would do anything for me," Barrino said. "I felt like all I had to do was get the mike, get on the stage and sing and everything else behind me would be taken care of but it didn't happen that way."
Now, she says, it's about moving on.
"I'm excited to be back. It's been a long time coming," she said.
She has a new CD in the works.
"I want to reach back out to the audience I had from Idol. What I want is a timeless record," she said.
She's also making another run at "The Color Purple" -- a role she says she wasn't sure she could handle at first.
"People see more in me than I see in myself," she said.
Barrino's own reality show is shooting now. It will air on VH1 beginning in January.
Right now she's an open book about everything from her teen pregnancy to not being the best reader, to what she wants in a man.
"It's not about what a person can do for you but show you genuine love, care about you, know when you're sick, just be there for you. That's the kind of man I'm looking for," Barrino said.
And Barrino says she'll always come home to Charlotte.
"I come home to good sweet tea, fried chicken and people that come outside and wave -- 'Hey, how you doing' -- that keeps me going," she said.
And at 24, she says, that's exactly what she's doing. She is keeping going.
“What I have is something very special and I won't let nothing get in the way of that," she said.
Video of the interview and source
You'd think she'd have learned a lesson, sold one, and paid the other off.
Yay!!!
Yes!
and she's annoying
My family (me, my husband, my daughter who was 3 at the time, and my son who was just barely 7 months) lived out of our POS 1986 Olds last year. THAT is tough shit. She still had money, someone just wasn't paying her bills. WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
do you have a point?
no bitch, i dont.
I had to read this sentence about four times before it made grammatical sense to me, and even now I'm not sure I'm right about it. People should use commas more, especially when they're necessary. :/ Either that, or stop writing sentence fragments. I'm not really sure which it's supposed to be.
She says she always had the money, and when a judge realized that, the near foreclosures -- and the people she used to have working for her -- went away.
WHICH IS WHY COMMA RULES ARE IMPORTANT. GET IT, WORLD??? Lol. I can't stand it when articles have bad grammar, especially when it's as basic as a comma rule. Even if the journalist sucks at grammar, then they need to have editors monitoring that shit. Ffs.
And if it's NOT supposed to be read this way, then it's just a sentence fragment.