A top Miss America executive says the claim of this year’s pageant winner, Cara Mund, that she’s been bullied is a lot of bull.

In an interview Friday with “People’’ magazine, Gretchen Carlson, who heads the spectacle’s board of directors, claims, “We have supported Cara for her entire year and we will continue to support her. It’s just disappointing that she chose to air her grievance publicly and not privately.”

The allegedly dissed miss insists she was, bullied, bothered and belittled since winning the title.

Mund, the former Miss North Dakota, claims Miss America officials have been as cold to her as winter in her home state.

“My voice is not heard nor wanted by our current leadership,” she wrote.

But Carlson said that was never the case and that she’s “incredibly sad and heartbroken” after reading the impassioned message.

The higher up addressed Mund’s accusation that she was purposely given no air time on Good Morning America in July to discuss the elimination of the famous swimsuit competition.

“We brought her to New York the day before and provided her with media training. We asked Cara to come to the studio because we thought by chance, even at the last minute, they would maybe include her,” Carlson said.

Carlson said she plans to reach out to Mund shortly, adding she sympathizes with her frustrations.

“It’s the toughest job you will ever have,” said Carlson, who was Miss America in 1989. “Every Miss America could tell you if they wanted to about the ups and downs of their year. I could. But you realize as more time passes what an amazing opportunity you have been given to serve as a role model and an ambassador for our country and to make a difference.”