
Two Minutes to Midnight: When Tim Conway Redefined TV Comedy
The clock is ticking. The tension is rising. The room feels moments from collapse.
And then Tim Conway starts walking.

Not fast.
Not with urgency.
But at the impossibly slow pace of The Oldest Man — a character so deliberate it feels like time itself has paused to watch.
The sketch unfolds on The Carol Burnett Show with Harvey Korman in full panic mode. There’s a device counting down, instructions flying, and pressure building by the second. Every moment matters.
And Conway responds by… shuffling.
Each step stretches the moment further. The audience laughs early, sensing what’s coming. The delay becomes the joke.

Then the pockets open.
Not tools.
Not solutions.
A ham sandwich. A rubber mouse. And glasses worn upside down.
The studio erupts. Korman turns red, fighting to stay composed as control slips away. Conway’s genius isn’t just the joke — it’s the timing. He lets the moment breathe until it becomes unbearable.

Finally, the pliers rise.
They shake.
They lower inch by inch.
By now, Korman is completely undone. The audience isn’t watching a sketch anymore — they’re watching comic mastery in real time.
This isn’t slapstick. It’s a lesson in patience, trust, and escalation. No music cues. No rush. Just two performers letting the moment grow until laughter takes over.
The countdown was only bait.
The real payoff was the laughter.