Much of this special is pretty funny, but I do wish she wouldn't refer to everyone who is ditzy and younger than her as a millennial. It's kind of a cheap (and inaccurate) way to get boomer applause. Most of the people she described as millennials would actually fall into Gen Z. I'm 40 and I'm technically a millennial, so the 20-year-old space cadet millennial trope is pretty played out at this point. Time to bully the next generation, I guess?
It feels like she's pandering to a particular segment of the population (baby boomers) who get off on being triggered by the word "millennial," even if it's blatantly misused. And honestly, the long rants about millennials not only make her come across as an angry, out-of-touch old lady, but those (long) moments of the special feel dated and recycled from thousands of standup sets from 15 years ago.
You say the country isn't ready for war, because of the entitled millennials you encounter at taco bell? News flash: half the millennials alive are too old to be drafted and all of them are older than your typical taco bell employee. Millennials are soccer moms, doctors, plumbers, professors, business owners, etc.
If her set didn't rely so heavily on outdated stereotypes, I wouldn't have voted down for it. But she spends SO much time crapping on Gen Z and calling them millennials that it gets real old and pumps the brakes on the momentum of her set.