Abbi Jacobson is embarrassed to admit she sees everything she’s ever done in relation to “Broad City.” “I can only mark my life now by what I was doing on the show,” she tells me over the phone on the same day that the series’ final episode aired last month. “I don’t fucking know what else I did.”

The truth is, while becoming everyone’s favorite millennial comedy duo alongside Ilana Glazer, Jacobson did a quite a bit. In the past five years, she wrote a memoir, I Might Regret This; hosted the fine-art podcast, A Piece of Work; starred in “The Simpsons” creator Matt Groening’s latest animated series, “Disenchantment”; and took her first dramatic turn, in last year’s addiction-themed film 6 Balloons. She’s also set to executive produce and write for a forthcoming comedy series based on the 1992 movie A League of Their Own, about a women’s baseball team.

Now that “Broad City” is officially over, nearly a decade after it began as a DIY web series, Jacobson is just starting to untangle what her life means without it. But she already knows how she’d like the show to be remembered. “The whole time we’ve been on TV, our gender was always put in front of what we do,” she says. “I hope that won’t be the case anymore, and it’ll just be one of the funniest shows and not one of the funniest female-driven shows.”

When it comes to the legacy of her “Broad City” character’s hardcore Phish fandom, Jacobson would also like to get something off her chest. “Abbi represents my nostalgic relationship to Phish,” she says. In reality, it’s her brother who was the more serious Phish Head. “I’ve only been to like 10 Phish shows,” she admits. Looking back at the music that has defined Jacobson’s life so far, it’s clear her taste has been heavily influenced by her jam band-obsessed older brother, her classic rock-loving dad, and, no surprise, the generation-defining show that she devoted so much sweat and care to for so long.