Tim Conway’s Quiet Morning Turns Into Total Mayhem — and Fans Say It’s One of the Funniest Carol Burnett Sketches Ever
Tim Conway’s “sentient plant” sketch on The Carol Burnett Show is comedy chaos at its finest — a slow-motion meltdown that left even Carol Burnett helpless with laughter. Conway strolls in to return a defective talking plant, only for the bit to spiral into pure absurdity. Every rustle, sigh, and leaf twitch sends the audience into hysterics, while Conway’s deadpan calm makes it even funnier. It’s vintage Conway — mischievous, unflappable, and brilliantly timed — the kind of sketch that proves why no one could survive sharing a stage with him.
During a rehearsal, Tim Conway casually announced that he had completely forgotten his lines. Harvey Korman froze. “What are you planning to do on stage then?
THIRTY SECONDS OF SILENCE THAT BROKE AMERICA — AND CHANGED JOHNNY CARSON FOREVER Live on air, the king of late night froze. His hands shook. He couldn’t speak. A seven-year-old girl, a folded letter, and a father’s final words stopped the most controlled show on television. No jokes. No music. Just truth — raw enough to silence millions of living rooms. This isn’t a TV moment. It’s proof that love, once spoken, never really stops reaching people.
The Sketch That Made Harvey Korman Lose It Completely! This iconic photo comes from a classic sketch where Carol Burnett plays a hilariously awkward woman on a blind date with Harvey Korman. The scene starts off sweet — two strangers trying to make small talk on a park bench. But as the conversation goes on, Carol’s character starts doing one weird thing after another… picking her nails, scratching, sniffing, and finally… digging in her nose!
It looked like harmless clowning with a yo-yo, but television executives were not laughing. When Tommy Smothers stepped onstage, audiences expected a throwaway gag and got something sharper instead — a playful performance that quietly mocked rules, control, and the people enforcing them. “Yo-Yo Man” turned childlike fun into sly satire, slipping meaning past the censors one spin at a time. Viewers laughed, authority bristled, and television history gained another example of how The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour hid rebellion in plain sight.