ATLANTA – An Atlanta college student is inciting the rage of parents across the country after she called in to a local radio show to talk about money troubles after blowing a $90,000 college fund left by her grandparents.

The 22-year-old junior recently explained to The Bert Show how she squandered $90,000 in her first three years in college and is now broke, and asked the public for advice on covering the remaining $20,000 in tuition for her senior year.

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The student, identified only as Kim, told listeners her parents have refused to give her the additional funds, and that’s totally not fair.

The interview not only highlights the high cost of higher education, but also the increasingly entitled mentality of some millennials.

“Years ago my grandparents set up a college fund for me, which was amazing, and I haven’t been very good with my budget for school. The first payment for my senior year just arrived and I don’t have the money basically. I’ve just been avoiding it. I know the bill was coming,” Kim told the radio station, according to Yahoo Finance.

Kim apparently spent the money she should have saved for college on more important things, and now believes it’s her parents’ fault for her current predicament.

“I used it to budget for school clothes and college break money. I probably should have not done that. I took a trip to Europe. The Europe thing I thought was part of my education and that’s how I tied to justify that,” she said.

“Maybe (my parents) should have taught me to budget or something,” Kim said. “They never sat me down and had a real serious talk about it.”

She thinks her parents should just fork over the cash, but they just won’t do it. Instead, they keep coming up with other options that just won’t work, Kim told The Bert Show.

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“(My parents) said there was nothing they could do for me. They’re not being honest with may saying they don’t have (money) because my did as worked for like a million years and they have a retirement account,” she said.

“Then my parents suggested I take out a loan at a credit union and I’m, like, how am I supposed to do that?” Kim continued. “I have to go inside the bank to get a loan?”

Yahoo reports that Bert Show co-host Jeff Dauler offered a solution, but was quickly rebuffed.

“You could get a job for the school … maybe the cafeteria’s hiring,” Dauler said.

“That’s embarrassing,” Kim responded, according to the site. “I know they’re trying to teach me a lesson and blah blah blah and character building but, I like, I hope they realize (working part-time) could have such a negative effect on my grades and as a person.”

Kim’s comments sparked a firestorm of criticism online.

“Okay, as infuriating as she is, this is why you don’t give an immature 22 year old $90,000. Her grandparents should’ve set up a trust fund for her with stipulations,” Candace Wells posted to The Bert Show’s Facebook page. “She isn’t responsible enough to realize that she just blew her future. She could’ve paid for college, bought a car, and put down a payment on a house!”

“This girl is a joke!” Jillian Edwards posted. “I work full time and go to school full time! And I pay for my living and expenses. Ugh! Get your shit together!”

Emily Ray was personally offended by Kim’s comments.

“There are no words. I’m a full time preschool teacher, I take 18 credit hours a semester, I have a two year old son with another one on the way, and I STILL make all As,” Ray posted. “If you really want that college degree you will do everything in your power to get it. If you really want good grades, you’ll make it happen. This interview was insulting and infuriating to all who work hard for their degrees! To say I want to slap her would be an understatement!

Yahoo reports Kim eventually came to grips with her situation, and told the radio show her parents wouldn’t co-sign on a loan unless she gets a job, which she apparently now plans to do. The struggle now, she said, it trying to find a job with zero employment history.

“I feel like I’m back at square one,” Kim said. “I’m hustling to do this and to make this work.”