UNTIL TIM CONWAY TURNED IT INTO LEGEND. What began as a segment destined to collapse on The Carol Burnett Show instantly morphed into one of the greatest comedic explosions in TV history the moment Tim delivered his iconic slow-burn madness. Carol was shaking, Harvey was literally falling out of his chair, and the entire crew was seconds away from ruining the take because they couldn’t stop laughing. Fans still argue nothing before or after has matched the pure, beautiful chaos Conway created without even trying. Even decades later, people say watching this clip once is enough to understand why it remains the most unforgettable unscripted meltdown ever captured on camera.

The Carol Burnett Show (1967)

Some comedians deliver jokes.

Tim Conway delivered moments — the kind that started with a quiet spark, built into pure chaos, and finally erupted into uncontrollable laughter that swept through the cast, crew, and millions watching at home.

But even by Conway standards, this moment stands above the rest — a scene that should’ve fallen apart instantly, a sketch that was dangerously close to disaster… until Tim stepped in and transformed it into one of the most legendary, side-splitting segments ever aired on The Carol Burnett Show.

Everyone in the studio saw the setup wobbling. Lines weren’t landing.
Props weren’t cooperating.
Even Carol Burnett later admitted she thought, “Oh no, this is going to be a disaster.” And then Tim Conway did what only Tim Conway could do:

He hijacked the entire set — slowly, subtly, masterfully.

The Slow Burn That Ignited the Room

Harvey Korman found comedic fame with Kaye, Burnett | The Seattle Times

Conway didn’t jump into the punchline.
He didn’t save the moment with loud jokes or slapstick antics.

He used the weapon that made him a legend:
the slow burn.

The microscopic pauses.
The wandering eyes.
The half-finished sentences.
The way he let tension stretch until it became unbearable — and then snapped it with a single perfectly timed word or gesture.

It was comedy as a science.
It was mischief as an art form.

Slowly, the cast began cracking.

Carol Burnett Tried to Hold It Together… and Failed Beautifully

This Sketch With Tim Conway and Harvey Korman Made Us Grin From Ear-To-Ear

Carol Burnett, the queen of composure, fought with everything she had.

Her lips tightened. Her shoulders trembled. Her eyes darted away from Conway like they were begging for mercy.

But once Tim leaned into the bit — building that ridiculous, rhythmic, off-kilter comedic rhythm he was famous for — she broke.

A giggle. A snort. A full-body collapse into laughter.

She tried to recover. She couldn’t. And the audience loved every second of it.

Harvey Korman Didn’t Stand a Chance

If Carol fell first, Harvey Korman didn’t last long either — but no one expected him to.

Harvey was notorious for breaking whenever Tim Conway entered a sketch with That Look.
And this time?
It was over within seconds.

He shook so hard his chair became part of the scene.
He buried his face in his hands.
He gasped for air between uncontrollable fits of laughter.

Harvey wasn’t just out of character —
he was out of the universe.

And Conway, sensing victory, dialed the chaos up another notch.

Even the Crew Lost Control

When the actors break, it’s funny.
When the camera operators break, it becomes a masterpiece.

Conway’s timing was so outrageous that production crew behind the cameras collapsed, shaking, wiping tears, trying desperately not to ruin the shot. The studio floor became a battlefield of people losing their professional composure.

It was chaos.
It was electricity.
It was comedic perfection.

A “Disaster” That Became Comedy Gold

The scene wasn’t saved —
it was transformed.

A moment that could’ve died quietly instead turned into one of the most beloved sketches in television history. Fans still share it, still quote it, still say it was the moment that proved Tim Conway wasn’t just funny…

He was unstoppable.

Few performers could take a potential flop and turn it into a runaway hit in real time.
Tim Conway could.
And he did — again and again.