If you don't meet a strict experience requirement you don't even get in through the door, but you can still send a resume. You lose nothing, and if you get an interview anyway it means they're either flexible enough with their requirements to give you a chance, or the requirements are there because some jackass in HR just reused the text for a more important job opening. If you got an interview, you're already halfway there. It means they're interested in you in some way, but you still have to sell yourself. Dress smart, be attentive and enthusiastic, show them your best side, and only lie enough to be convincing. When I see a bitchy BPD troon like that one whining about never getting hired I know exactly what happened: the interviewer was polite and pleasant, told them "we'll call you back, okay?", then immediately threw their file in the trash because their psychological profile is a neon billboard visible from a mile away.
On to the larger point, finding a job when you're just starting out has never been a matter of being picky. You see the same shit with first-time house buyers, too. They obsess over a specific property, then become despondent when the deal falls through. Meanwhile a seasoned house buyer looks at 20 properties and makes offers on multiple ones, and if they don't get the one they really wanted, tough shit. Likewise, you don't send 5 or 10 job applications, one to each Starbucks in a 10-block radius, and then give up and go whine on twitter. You send 50 or 100 applications and then start broadening your horizons and applying for different entry-level jobs you might not even be fully qualified for. You're not special fresh out of college, people aren't looking for you, specifically. The doors are all already closed, all you're doing is gambling that one might open if you knock on enough of them. And if that door opens and you get that interview... well, see the previous paragraph.
Powerleveling here again but it's just to prove a point: my college degree was in civil engineering, but my first job out of college was as a glorified gardener. Why? They were the first ones to give me a call back. Did I use any of the knowledge I picked up in college? Maybe some shit about drainage, but I was really only there as another pair of hands. Did it suck? Absolutely. But it was an income and even though I had to tighten my belt to make ends meet it allowed me to keep looking for a better job with a roof over my head without having to go back to my parents' house, and that's what truly mattered to me.