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Olivia Jade Giannulli is reportedly furious with her parents, Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli, after the “Full House” actress and her fashion designer husband were charged with bribing their daughter’s way into the University of Southern California.

Olivia Jade Giannulli, 19, had begged her parents to let her focus on her career as a YouTube vlogger and Instagram influencer, Entertainment Tonight reported. Instead, her reportedly “competitive” parents believed she needed to go to a prestigious college and earn a degree in order to secure a prosperous, successful future.

Now, following the parents’ arrest, the outbreak of a national scandal and major brands cutting ties with Giannulli, she believes her parents “have ruined everything,” a source told Entertainment Tonight.

“She has been passionate about her career and wanted to work and was doing well but that wasn’t enough,” the source added to Entertainment Tonight. “Her parents said she would have to juggle college and her career. Now she’s devastated because everything she built has imploded before her eyes.”

“She feels they ruined everything.”

Before news of the scandal broke, Giannulli’s Instagram and YouTube accounts had a combined 3.3 million followers. The enterprising teen also had formed partnerships with a number of brands to promote their products, including signature cosmetics and fashion collections with, respectively, Sephora and Princess Polly.

Last week, her parents were charged in federal court with paying $500,000 to William “Rick” Singer, who has pleaded guilty to charges of setting up a sham charity that funneled bribes to standardized test cheaters and university coaches on behalf of his rich clients.

The alleged scams run by Singer are said to constitute the largest college-admissions cheating scandal in U.S. history. More than 30 wealthy parents from across the country have been charged in the scandal, including actress Felicity Huffman and Bill McGlashan, one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent private equity investors.

Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli are accused of working with Singer to get Olivia and their older daughter, Isabella, 20, admitted to USC on the false pretense of them being recruited to the university’s crew team.

Earlier this week, USC announced that it may expel students linked to the scandal and had already “placed holds on the accounts of students who may be associated with the alleged admissions scheme.” This move prevents the students from registering for classes or acquiring transcripts.

However, TMZ reported last week that the Giannulli sisters had already decided to withdraw from the school, though USC said they still were enrolled.

It’s not clear whether Olivia Jade or Isabella, an aspiring actress, were aware of the alleged scam, though Olivia Jade posed for an “action picture” meant to bolster her credibility as a crew coxswain for her applications, according to the complaint filed against her parents in federal court.

The complaint also said the sisters were to be coached in how to explain to officials at their private Los Angeles high school how they gained admission to USC to row on the crew team, when they had not previously participated in the sport. They were told to say that they would try out for the crew team once they started at USC, according to the complaint.

Entertainment Tonight said Olivia Jade and Isabella Giannulli both are “suffering” from the fallout of their parents’ arrests. The fallout includes intense national backlash that has focused on the sisters, portraying them as privileged, pampered “average” students who took away coveted college spots from more deserving students.

From the federal complaint, the world now knows that Isabella Giannulli didn’t have the grades and test scores to get into USC. Olivia Jade Giannulli also admitted on her YouTube channel that going to school wasn’t a priority for her, that she mostly cared about vlogging and being a social media influencer.

Nonetheless, Olivia Jade Giannulli at one point used her status as a USC student as part of her self-branding efforts and to sell products for Amazon Prime, then one of her corporate sponsors.

Giannulli also said on Twitter that she enjoyed being mobbed by fans at USC. According to Aol.com, she responded to a fan: “At USC, when I got mobbed, that wasn’t annoying to me. That was fun and funny and exciting. I was, like, there’s so much adrenaline and it was game day. But yeah, no, I really don’t get annoyed and I love you guys.”

Since the scandal broke, Sephora and TRESemmé have announced that they are no longer working with Giannulli, while Princess Polly apparently de-activated its page showcasing its Olivia Jade clothing line.

“Bella and Olivia are suffering in their own ways from the fallout of their parents’ decisions,” a source told Entertainment Tonight. “Bella and Olivia have a very tight-knit group of friends who have been there to support them. They’ve needed that support because they’re being attacked at every turn.”

The source added that the prospect of losing her place at USC is harder for Isabella Giannulli because she “was far more invested in college and would have loved to have completed USC.”

For Olivia Jade Giannulli, she is “so embarrassed she doesn’t even want to go out.”