The sketch starts simply. Harvey Korman plays the serious boss, giving clear, fast instructions. Everything feels normal and under control. Then Tim Conway enters as the new worker — slow, polite, and painfully innocent.
Harvey gives Tim an easy task. Tim nods like he understands… but doesn’t move. After a long pause, Tim asks a completely wrong question, clearly misunderstanding the instructions. Harvey corrects him. Tim tries again — and gets it wrong in an even more ridiculous way.
This pattern repeats. Every time Harvey explains, Tim misunderstands it worse. He repeats the instructions incorrectly, adds details that were never said, and takes long, uncomfortable pauses before responding. The audience starts laughing, and Harvey realizes what’s happening — Tim isn’t making noise, he’s quietly dismantling the scene.
That’s the breaking point. Harvey tries to stay in character, but every look at Tim makes it worse. His shoulders shake, his head drops, and he completely loses control. The sketch collapses into real laughter, the audience explodes, and Tim stands there calmly, as if nothing unusual is happening.
This is why the moment is legendary. There’s no shouting, no big punchlines — just perfect timing, confusion, and patience. It’s comedy built slowly and destroyed beautifully, live on stage.