“Are you sure it’s still ticking?” — Harvey Korman barely finishes the line before The Oldest Man (Tim Conway) creeps into the room at a pace that could test the patience of time itself. In the legendary “Clock Repair” sketch from The Carol Burnett Show, Conway doesn’t just fix a clock — he dismantles reality. Every step groans, every pause drags on impossibly long, and Korman’s fight to stay composed becomes part of the joke. What starts as a routine repair collapses into glorious chaos: tools drop, parts fall apart, and Conway’s stone-faced delivery never breaks. This is physical comedy at its finest — proof that in Conway’s universe, time doesn’t move forward… it barely survives the journey.

“Are you sure it’s still ticking?” Harvey Korman asks, voice tight with barely suppressed anxiety — and that’s when The Oldest Man (Tim Conway) shuffles into the room, moving with the deliberate slowness of someone who’s forgotten what hurry even means. In Clock Repair, one of The Carol Burnett Show’s most legendary sketches, Conway transforms time itself into a living, breathing joke, while Korman’s desperate attempts to maintain composure become comedy gold.

Every step Conway takes is a masterclass in tension and timing — his creaking knees, wobbly posture, and infinitesimal gestures exaggerate the absurdity of the simplest movements. Gears fall. Tools clatter to the floor. Korman’s face twitches, eyes widening, hands covering half his mouth as he struggles — and ultimately fails — to suppress laughter. Even Carol Burnett doubles over, helpless in the face of Conway’s relentless deadpan genius.

What begins as a straightforward repair job dissolves into utter chaos: clocks wobble precariously, hammers swing too slowly to be safe, and every pause, every drawn-out movement stretches longer than reason allows. The audience roars with every exaggerated tick, and what could have been mundane becomes something almost mythic — a ballet of physical comedy that’s equal parts absurd and sublime.

Conway never breaks character. He limps, coughs, wheezes, and stumbles as if defying the very laws of time, leaving Korman, Burnett, and everyone watching at home in stitches. In this sketch, time doesn’t just fly — it crawls, sputters, and staggers its way into history, immortalized by one of television’s most mischievous, meticulously chaotic minds.

 

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The second Tim Conway stepped into that scene, you could already feel it coming. That slow walk, the squint, the pauses that stretched just a little too long — it was like watching a setup you knew was about to explode. And right there next to him, Harvey is doing everything he can to hold it together… and failing spectacularly. The outlaw’s already cracking, the room starts to shake with laughter, and Conway just keeps pushing it further — slower, quieter, more ridiculous with every second. That’s what made it magic. No rush, no noise — just perfect timing and the kind of control that turns silence into chaos. By the end, nobody’s in character anymore. Not Harvey. Not the cast. Not even the audience. Just pure, unstoppable laughter.

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