
Braden Peters, the 20-year-old influencer better known online as Clavicular, has quietly locked in a one-year lease on a showpiece penthouse at the Paramount tower in downtown Miami. The polarizing “looksmaxxing” creator is now living in one of the city’s priciest high-rise settings while he continues to make headlines. Local real estate sources say the residence spans roughly 6,500 square feet and includes multiple bedrooms and baths.
The deal and the suite
Sources told The Real Deal that real estate investor Greg Mirmelli brokered Peters’ lease and that an LLC led by developer Dan Kodsi owns the unit. According to the outlet, the penthouse measures about 6,500 square feet, offers five bedrooms and seven bathrooms, and is being marketed for sale with an asking price near $9.5 million by OneWorld’s Peggy Olin. A source told the publication the lease term is one year.
Paramount and Miami Worldcenter
The Paramount tower is a 60-story high-rise completed in 2019 that anchors the Miami Worldcenter master plan, a mixed-use project combining residential units with retail and hotel space. Its penthouse collection includes some of the largest residences in downtown Miami and has been positioned to attract both buyers and short-term renters. The broader development has reshaped a stretch of the city’s core with heavy amenity offerings and open-air retail promenades, according to Miami Condo Lifestyle.
Why this is notable
Peters has been in a steady spotlight of viral moments and legal trouble. He livestreamed a rhinoplasty performed by celebrity surgeon Dr. Michael Salzhauer on June 3, as documented by People. Earlier this spring he was arrested on a battery warrant in Fort Lauderdale, according to NBC6, and in April he was hospitalized during a livestream after viewers reported a suspected overdose. Those incidents have kept the streamer in public view even as he upgrades to a luxury lease.
Legal fallout
In mid-May, Peters accepted a plea agreement in a misdemeanor case tied to a March Everglades livestream. The Miami Herald reports that the resolution includes six months of probation, 20 hours of community service that cannot be livestreamed, and required firearm-safety and wildlife-protection courses. The plea was entered as no contest with adjudication withheld, which means the charge can be removed from his record if he follows all the terms. Those conditions specifically bar him from monetizing or streaming the community-service portion.
The lease puts Peters in a high-profile residential setting at a delicate moment in his public life. Neighbors and property managers in similar luxury towers have in recent years fielded concerns about streaming-related disturbances. For now, his move into Paramount is one more sign of Miami’s pull on social-media personalities and of the city’s luxury rental market continuing to attract headline-grabbing tenants.









