Olivia Munn is once again at the center of angst.
Last year, Packers fans targeted her and blamed her for her boyfriend, quarterback Aaron Rodgers' struggles to start the season. Now, she's getting blamed for a whole different topic.
Rodgers' brother, Jordan, appeared on and won "The Bachelorette" this past season and with his appearance came knowledge of a rift between his family and the Packers signal caller.
Sources later revealed that Munn could be at the center of it all, which much like the blame for the Packers' season, should be taken with a grain of salt.
"[Olivia] has a strong personality," a source told Terez Owens. "Every meeting she has had with them has gone badly."
Jordan appeared on the show and won the heart of JoJo Fletcher, getting engaged to her on Monday's season finale -- which is further than his older brother has gotten with Munn despite dating her since May 2014.
On one episode, Fletcher came to Jordan's neighborhood to see where he grew up and met his family, but there were two notable absences: Aaron and Munn.
"My middle brother won't be there," Jordan told Fletcher in the episode, according to the New York Post. "Like I said, I have a great relationship with my brother Luke. Me and Aaron really don't have much of a relationship."
The Packers quarterback has been mum on his brother's appearance on the show and the perceived family drama, though he was forced to address it briefly recently, offering vague answers about the show.
"I haven't seen the show, to be honest with you, so it hasn't really affected me a whole lot," Aaron said, according to WISN.com last month. "As far as those kinds of things go, I've always found that it's a little inappropriate to talk publicly about some family matters, so I'm just ... I'm not going to speak on those things. But I wish him well in the competition."
While Jordan and Fletcher intend to be married, Aaron has yet to put a ring on Munn's finger, despite rumors the "X-Men: Apocalypse" actress is ready for it.
Munn is no stranger to being the center of controversy -- even if she didn't really bring it on herself. When Packers fans released their venom on her when using the actress as the scapegoat for Rodgers' struggles, the media also hopped on board -- something which irked the former "Newsroom" star.
"I think fans should be able to say what they want," Munn said on Opie Radio in January. "You can't be in the public position and then cry about everybody who says something. But, when you have news organizations, the ones that were built by the trust of the public, the ones that you expect to have some accountability, that aren't just reprocessing whatever, if you want to come after me, you better be sure."
Now, people are taking aim at her as the possible source for the Rodgers family rift.
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