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5 year oldLori Loughlin‘s internet-famous daughter is fuming at her parents for “ruining her life” by allegedly scamming the YouTube star’s way into college.
Olivia Jade Giannulli, 19, is “really angry with her parents because she told them she did not want to go to college and she was pushed,” the New York Post reports.
Giannulli — a social media influencer who vlogged her daily life including makeup routines and USC dorm room tours for her two million YouTube subscribers — at first tried to brush off the scandal, but became angry with her parents when her endorsement deals with Sephora, TRESemmé and Estée Lauder were cancelled, according to a report.
“Now that her endorsement deals have fallen through she is very upset with her parents,” a source told Us Weekly.
“Olivia blames her mom and dad for this scandal and for the downfall of her career.”
The source noted that Giannulli did not have an interest in college, “but her parents were the ones who wanted her to get an education,” the outlet reported.
In fact, Giannulli admitted publicly she had no interest in classes — and was instead there for “game days” and “partying,” she said in one of her videos.
The feds say she didn’t even fill out her own college application.
“[Our younger daughter] has not submitted all her colleges [sic] apps and is confused on how to do so,” Loughlin allegedly wrote to admitted college admissions scam ring leader William “Rick” Singer, according to court papers.
The former Full House star and her husband Mossimo Giannulli are among 50 wealthy families and celebrities accused of bribing their kids’ ways into top colleges in a multistate investigation revealed earlier this month.
According to prosecutors, the Loughlin-Giannullis allegedly paid $500,000 to have Olivia and daughter Isabella Rose, 20, admitted to USC as recruits for the crew team — a sport they did not participate in.
Giannulli and her sister Isabella Rose Giannulli, 20, have not returned to campus since Loughlin was arrested on March 13, according to reports.
Olivia was allegedly aboard a yacht owned by USC Board of Trustees Chairman Rick Caruso when the scandal broke.
This article originally appeared on the New York Post and has been republished with permission.
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