Article snippet: On Monday, two things happened. Elizabeth Warren announced the formation of a presidential exploratory committee. And Tiffany Haddish failed to be funny on stage in Florida. In both cases, the narrative became less about these women doing their jobs, and more about their likability. Because when you are a girl or a woman, it’s all about being liked. Within hours of Warren’s announcement, Politico was picking apart her chances of escaping the stigmas that plagued Hillary Clinton, “written off as too unlikable before her campaign gets off the ground.” And Haddish, known for her catchphrase “She Ready,” became a #shenotready hashtag. She bombed her New Year’s Eve set at the James L. Knight Center in Miami. She was hungover and flubbed. Paying customers have the right to be disappointed over a bad show. They deserve a refund. The comedian herself admitted she flopped, tweeting, “I wish it was better Miami. I prayed on it and I have a strong feeling this will never happened (sic) again.” But people piled on with delight over her failure. The schadenfreude was real. A video of a man in the audience heckling her performance has been viewed more than 2.6 million times and has 11,000 likes. In comments under her pictures on Instagram and all over Twitter, Haddish has been called loud and ghetto.” Sigh. How is this not the story of one bad night? Comedians bomb sometimes. Dave Chappelle got booed off stage in Detroit in 2015 and went on to stage a major critically accl... Link to the full article to read more