He finally gets his wings… and heaven instantly regrets it. In this classic sketch, Tim Conway arrives as the newest angel in paradise — sweet, curious, and completely unprepared for eternity. Harvey Korman plays the weary veteran assigned to train him, and from the very first instruction you can see the panic set in. Every simple task turns into a misunderstanding, every explanation makes things worse, and paradise slowly unravels one innocent mistake at a time. Harvey struggles to keep his composure, but Conway’s slow, perfectly timed delivery chips away at him until he collapses into laughter. It’s not loud comedy — it’s precision. Gentle, patient chaos that builds until nobody on screen can hold it together. Two angels enter heaven. Only one survives the shift.
I’m convinced Tim Conway had one secret mission: dismantle Harvey Korman — slowly, mercilessly, and with exquisite politeness. One shuffle at a time. You’ve never seen a silent comedy duel like this. Tim moves in near–slow motion: a blink, a tiny step, a careful reach for the ship’s wheel… and Harvey is already gone. Gasping. Wheezing. Folding in on himself like he just sprinted a marathon in clown shoes. It’s surgical. Every pause lands like a punchline. Every shuffle becomes a weapon. Every stretch of silence tightens the trap. The studio is finished. The cast is finished. The crew is finished. Everyone’s doubled over, fighting for air — except Harvey, who’s trapped in the most polite nightmare imaginable, plotting revenge while begging for mercy. Patience doesn’t just disappear — Tim turns it into a weapon of mass hilarity. Watching him work feels like a masterclass in comedy, disguised as the gentle destruction of one man’s dignity. And the best part? There’s a behind-the-scenes detail from this sketch that fans swear is even funnier than what actually made it to air.