Most of us often feel like "nothing [we] do is ever enough," and that is precisely how Rachel Sennott wanted I Love L.A. to land. In this new HBO comedy, the Bottoms and Shiva Baby star dips into the quicksand of being ambitious and chronically online in a city (and world at large) that thrives on making people feel like they're not quite enough.Sennott, who describes herself as a "zillennial" (somewhere between millennial and Gen Z). "It's hard," she admitted to Deadline."We're not able to accomplish the same things our parents were at this age. It feels like nothing you do is ever enough. There's way too much information on our phones."I Love L.A. is not an average hot mess friend group sitcom. Sennott and her co-showrunner Emma Barrie (of Barry fame) have crafted what Sennott jokingly calls "Entourage for internet girls." It's a love letter to the 20-somethings who are confident yet collapsing in real time.What is I Love L.A. about? At the center of I Love L.A. is Maia, played by Sennott. She is a Type A working through a career that just doesn't reward her hustle. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostSennott quipped:"She's like, 'I will get the last job on the Titanic as it sinks.'"Opposite her is Tallulah (Odessa A'zion), an influencer who's unfazed by capitalism. Then there's Alani (True Whitaker), a nepo baby who wants everyone to get along, and Charlie (Jordan Firstman), an aspiring designer.The group's counterweight is Dylan, Maia's older boyfriend, played by Josh Hutcherson, aka Peeta from The Hunger Games. His character represents an older generation that feels both adjacent to and baffled by Gen Z's reality. Barrie said:"Josh (...) gels so well with the (...) cast, and you feel like he is living in a different world (...) but he’s never making fun of that other world."Sennott explained:"We wanted to look at the characters with empathy." That makes I Love L.A. sting a little.What inspired Rachel Sennott to make I Love L.A.? View this post on Instagram Instagram PostBehind the one-liners and chaos, I Love L.A. is also a mirror for Sennott's own late-20s reckoning. She laughed:"My early 20s were really chaotic. My mid-20s, I was like, ‘Okay, I’m locking in.'(...) And then at the end of my 20s, I feel like (...) things got chaotic again."That informs her characters (Maia, the anxious control freak, and Tallulah, the free spirit), who represent Rachael Sennott herself. She mused:"In your late 20s, everyone is (...) picking their path, and (...) You’re like, ‘Wait guys, what are we doing?'"Rachel Sennott at the show's advance screening (Image via WBD)I Love L.A. seems to be hitting a generational nerve. At the recent surprise advance screening at L.A.'s Lodge Room, fans got a sneak peek at the first two episodes, followed by an after-party with DJ Hunny Bee.Sennott's message that being lost is universal. It's okay to love a city that doesn't always love you back.The show will be on HBO on Sundays at 10:30 p.m. ET/PT and will stream on HBO Max. New episodes will be released every week until December 21.