Netflix appears to be trolling the University of Southern California over its role in the college admissions scandal with billboards for a new show that were placed near the school, according to a report Thursday.

Bright pink ads for “The Politician” featuring actress Gwyneth Paltrow smirking next to the quote “I bought their way in, too” and her TV “sons” were placed around the campus of USC, Bustle reported.

The show, which centers on a heated school presidential race at a wealthy Santa Barbara high school and was filmed before the scandal broke, features Paltrow as a privileged California mom who claims to have bought one of her son’s way into Harvard, according to the outlet.

The ad features her two other sons who happen to be wearing USC’s official colors — cardinal and gold.

Locals didn’t think the placement was a coincidence.

“I drove by campus today and @netflix is spectacularly trolling @USC with this billboard by the Arco,” wrote @StretchMcGuffin.

“Well played Netflix,” user @MC_Jazz_Hands tweeted.

“Netflix got jokes,” another user named @OneTokenBlack wrote.

In March, dozens of wealthy parents were arrested for allegedly paying scheme mastermind William “Rick” Singer to bribe their kids’ way into elite colleges, including USC.

Actress Lori Loughlin, 55, and her fashion-designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli, 56, allegedly paid $500,000 to Singer to help get daughters Olivia Jade and Isabella Rose get accepted to the university on bogus crew scholarships.

Billboards for “The Politician” were also placed near New York University, Yale, Harvard, Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, Stanford and Georgetown, according to the outlet.

Yale, Stanford, Pennsylvania and Georgetown have also been connected to the admissions scheme, but the other schools have not.

“The Politician” follows the storyline of the affluent teen Payton Hobart, played by Ben Platt, who has known since age 7 that he’s going to be president of the United States.

“But first he must navigate the most treacherous political landscape of all, Saint Sebastian High School,” a reads a description of the show on Netflix.

It is set to premiere on Sept. 27.

Loughlin and Giannulli both pleaded not guilty to charges of fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy in April.