can you fix this - meaning and definition. What is can you fix this
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What (who) is can you fix this - definition

RADIO AND LATER TELEVISION COMEDY SHOW
Can You Top This

So You Think You Can Dance: The Next Generation (Dutch TV series)         
SEASON OF TELEVISION SERIES
So You Think You Can Dance: The Next Generation (Netherlands)
So You Think You Can Dance: The Next Generation (abbreviated as SYTYCDNG) was a dance competition show on Dutch television RTL 5 in 2013. It was a youth spin-off version of the internationally franchised reality competition TV show So You Think You Can Dance.
Break/fix         
Break/Fix
The term break/fix or break'n fix refers to the fee-for-service method of providing information technology (IT) services to businesses. Using this method an IT solution provider performs services as needed and bills the customer only for the work done.
Fix (beer)         
  • Bavarian lion]] logo.
  • The late 1920s logo, blue / white combined with rhombic design features
  • Can and bottle until 2009
  • Can and bottle since 2010
  • Karl Johann Fix (Karolos Ioannou Fix), the son of Johann Ludwig Fix
  • 19th-century advertisement about the 'Steam-driven European Brewery' of Karl Fix
TRADEMARK
Fix Hellas Brewery
The Fix brewery (Greek: Φιξ) was founded in 1864 by Johann Karl Fix in Athens and is the first major brewery in Greece. About 30 years earlier, his father had started brewing beer in Greece.

Wikipedia

Can You Top This?

Can You Top This? was a radio panel game in which comedians told jokes and tried to top one another. The unrehearsed program, sponsored at one point by a papaya-flavored soft drink called Par and later by Colgate-Palmolive, was created by veteran vaudevillian "Senator" Edward Hastings Ford, who claimed he was taking part in a joke session at a New York theatrical club when he conceived the idea. However, the format was quite similar to a prior joke-telling radio series, Stop Me If You've Heard This One (1939–40), which featured Ford and cartoonist Harry Hershfield as panelists. Many jokes involved ethnic humor told in dialect.

Listeners were invited to send in jokes of their own, and an average of 3,000 were submitted per week. Host Peter Donald told the best of these jokes, each one centered on a different topic, while a "laugh meter" took note of the audience reaction on a scale of 0 to 1,000. The "Knights of the Clown Table" – Ford, Hershfield and Joe Laurie Jr. – attempted to outscore the listeners' jokes with some of their own, which sometimes presented an extra challenge as their jokes had to be pertinent to the topic.

Initially, a listener whose joke was read on the program received a guaranteed $2, plus $5 more if the panelists failed to beat it. The prize was later augmented to $11, which was "chopped" by $2 every time the joke was outscored. Those whose jokes were topped by all the panelists received a joke book as a consolation prize. Eventually, audience participants received $10, plus a $5 bonus for each panelist who failed to outscore it with his own joke, for a potential maximum prize of $25. Any ties on the laugh meter between a listener and panelist were broken in the listener's favor. Any submitted joke that earned a perfect 1,000 on the laugh meter was thus guaranteed to win the full $25 for its submitter. Every listener whose joke was used received a phonograph recording of Donald telling it on the air. Those who topped the laugh meter were also sent a "1,000 Club certificate." The panelists claimed that together they knew over 15,000 jokes.

Can You Top This? debuted on New York's WOR radio in 1940. NBC picked up the show in 1942, and it continued 12 more years. Hosts at one time or another included, Ward Wilson, Roger Bower and Dennis James, Wilson taking over from original host Bower in 1945. When Ford or Donald was unavailable, Wilson filled in on the panel or as the teller of listener jokes, so James acted as emcee.

Laurie died in 1954. In the show's later years, his place on the panel was filled by others, including former governor of New Jersey Harold Hoffman., Fred Hillebrand, and Bert Lytell. In 1954, Wilson once again told jokes on the panel, with Bower reprising his role as emcee.