“I SWEAR HE’S TRYING TO KILL ME!” — The Tim Conway Sketch That Broke Harvey Korman and Made TV History

There are funny TV moments…
There are legendary TV moments…
And then there are moments so uncontrollably hilarious they stop the show itself.
Tim Conway’s infamous slow-motion sketch on The Carol Burnett Show didn’t just earn laughs—it caused a full-blown comedic collapse that still leaves viewers crying, gasping, and rewinding decades later.
And at the center of it all was Harvey Korman—utterly defenseless.
When Comedy Becomes a Weapon
By the time Conway shuffled onstage as the painfully decrepit captain from “The Oldest Man” sketches, the audience already sensed danger. Not the scripted kind—but the kind that comes from knowing Tim Conway was about to test the limits of human composure.
What followed was not a joke.
It was a slow, merciless assault on self-control.
Every movement was excruciatingly delayed.
Every blink felt like it took a full minute.
Every microscopic reach for the ship’s wheel stretched time itself.
And Harvey Korman? He never stood a chance.
Within seconds, he was gone—face buried, shoulders shaking, desperately trying (and failing) to stay in character. At one point, barely able to breathe, he gasped the now-immortal line:
“I swear he’s trying to kill me.”
It wasn’t hyperbole. It was surrender.
Why This Sketch Is Still Unbeatable

What makes the slow-motion sketch legendary isn’t just that it’s funny—it’s how it’s funny.
Conway understood something rare: timing isn’t about speed. It’s about control.
He pushed the bit so far past reason that it became unbearable—in the best way possible. Just when you think he’s squeezed every laugh out of a moment, he slows it down even more. A step that should take one second takes twenty. A gesture becomes an endurance test.
You can actually see the breaking point arrive.
Korman’s eyes fill with tears.
He turns away.
He pleads silently for mercy.
And Conway? He never rushes. He never cracks. He lets the agony bloom.
The Audience Wasn’t Ready Either
It wasn’t just Korman collapsing—the studio audience was losing oxygen.
Laughter swelled, then erupted, then turned into something almost desperate. People weren’t laughing at the joke anymore—they were laughing at the sheer audacity of Conway refusing to let it end.
Carol Burnett herself struggled to maintain composure. The sketch teetered on the edge of chaos—and somehow became immortal because of it.
This wasn’t scripted perfection.
This was comedy happening in real time.
A Masterclass in Breaking Without Mean-Spiritedness

What’s remarkable is that none of it feels cruel.
Conway never mocked Korman. He trusted him. And Korman trusted Conway enough to be broken on national television—again and again—because the payoff was pure joy.
It’s comedy rooted in generosity, risk, and mutual respect. And that’s why it still works today.
Modern sketches often feel rushed. Overwritten. Edited for pace.
This one dares to do the opposite.
It slows down…
and destroys everyone in its path.
Why People Still Can’t Watch It Without Cracking
Even knowing what’s coming doesn’t help.
You wait for the stumble.
You brace for the reach.
You tell yourself you’ll hold it together this time.
You won’t.
Because the magic isn’t just the joke—it’s watching a professional comedian realize, live on air, that resistance is futile.
It’s watching comedy win.
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