Duh! She has the dankest memes! All of them!

"I don't know who created Pokémon Go," is a real thing Clinton said last month, "but I want to figure out how to get them to have Pokémon Go to the polls."

*Millennials do not love Hillary Clinton.

A spring poll by Harvard's politics institute showed Bernie Sanders was the only major candidate with a net-positive approval among 18-to-29-year-olds. The Clinton campaign's attempts at hip Snapchats and emoji-dialogue have been widely mocked.

There are 78 million of us. Of the small percentage of us expected to vote (that's partly on us and apathy, but it's also partly on voting not being a holiday, lack of automatic voter registration, etc.), most of us will back Clinton by default. But we could go to the polls in droves and help deliver a crushing victory both for her and the entire Democratic slate, if:

The central argument behind the Clinton campaign is that she is qualified for office. The problem is that millennials want a candidate to inspire them, not win by default. Millennials won't just vote for Clinton because Trump is a bad candidate — she needs to convince them that voting for her will make them better off.

Clinton's failure to do this — and her lack of a central message during the primary season — has already led to strong rebuke. Millennials gave Clinton less than 30 percent of their votes in key primaries and nearly precipitated her defeat.