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- 1967–197822mTV-G7.3 (38)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights of this show with guests Tim Conway and Ray Charles include: a country singer facing death row; Tim and Harvey as clumsy billboard hangers; Ray performs "Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma"; and Carol (as the Charwoman), Ray and the dancers perform a medley of "You Are My Sunshine", "St. Louis Blues", "Yesterday", "God Bless the Child" and "What'd I Say?".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.5 (64)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights include: a stand-up routine from guest George Carlin criticizing the Emmy Awards' bias in favor of big-budget shows; a spoof of "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice"; two airline stewardesses (Carol and guest Lucille Ball) compete for a "best employee" award and end up foiling an airline hijacking; Lyle and Vicki perform "Try a Little Kindness"; and Carol and Lucy as two old-time vaudeville performers being invited by a disc jockey (George) to perform at a rock concert.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.5 (36)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceGuest Mike Douglas sings the theme from "Love Story" and Bernadette Peters joins the dancers in "Tea for Two"; Mike and Carol offer a musical medley; a movie spoof entitled "The Most Happy Stella."
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.0 (30)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceMartha Raye joins Carol in a snappy medley of songs. Burnett's at her nasally, nagging best playing Zelda, who drives George into a bit of Walter Mitty-like escapism. Ballet stars Edward Villella and Violette Verdy provide Carol's Charwoman with her greatest challenge yet-dancing Swan Lake while wearing army boots.
- 1967–197822mTV-G7.7 (39)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights of this edition with guests Diahann Carroll and Tim Conway include: a spoof of the film "Summertime"; sketches involving a singles dance, water beds, jewel robbery, and bit players upstaging stars; and musical numbers from Diahann ("A Song for You"), Carol and Diahann ("Chutzpah"), and Carol and the dancers ("Saturday Morning Confusion").
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.6 (48)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights: First "Mrs. Wiggins" sketch, Steve Lawrence sings "In The Still of the Night," tribute to Glenn Miller with "Moonlight Serenade" and "Pennsylvania 6-5000".
- 1967–19781hTV-G6.8 (62)TV EpisodeDirectorClark JonesStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceCarol's guest Lana Turner sings "Heavenly Music" while dancing with the Ernie Flatt troop. Frank Gorshin does impressions then becomes Bluebeard with Carol his 13th wife. Carol and Harvey are a bickering couple on a game show.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (39)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceGuests stars Cass Elliott and Ricardo Montalban. Highlights include a skit with George (Harvey) and Zelda (Carol) and how they came to be married; Cass sings "Good Times are Coming". Carol and Cass play homely, single girls at a dance; Cass, Vicki, and Carol sing "Tell us Where the Good Times are" and "They Paved Paradise and Put up a Parking Lot"; A spoof on Esther Williams movies with Ricardo Montalban; and the charwoman makes an appearance with Emmett Kelley.
- 1967–197822mTV-G7.8 (34)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights include: Carol and guest Debbie Reynolds play nurses in a spoof of the wartime movie "So Proudly We Hail!"; guest John Davidson performs a banjo medley which includes "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head", and joins the ladies on "Thank You Very Much" from "Scrooge"; and Debbie performs a musical number, "Look at Me".
- DirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights of this show with guests Ken Berry and 'Mama' Cass Elliot include: more spoofs of TV commercials, including Carol as Mother Nature and Cass as a child using toothpaste; Carol impersonating Sonia Henie in a parody of the late skater/actress' movie musicals; Cass sings "There's a Lull in My Life" and duets with Carol on a "Love Medley"; and Ken performs "Razz-Ma-Tazz" with the dancers.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (50)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceImogene Coca and Miss Burnett play American school teachers in Rome, rhapsodizing to "If Love were All". The main sketch is a fairy tale spoof with Carol Burnett as Cinderumplewhite. Imogene Coca is the wicked witch and Robert Goulet is the handsome prince. Harvey Korman and Lyle Waggoner play the two-headed dragon that Goulet battles. Goulet solos "Didn't We" and Miss Cora sings "If Love Were All".
- DirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceTotie Fields, as the author of "The Desirable Woman" confides in a TV talk show hostess played by Carol. Guest Ken Berry plays a golfing priest and Harvey Korman is his rabbi partner. Totie plays a woman who thinks she's a werewolf. Ken demonstrates his terpsichorean talents in "Let's Have a Party"; the entire cast offers "Put On Your Sunday Best"; Miss Burnett solos "Make a Rainbow".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.7 (55)TV EpisodeDirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceMiss Burnett welcomes two old friends, Garry Moore and Durward Kirby, for a nostalgic (and funny) repetition of some of the comedy sketches that made them all famous. In one sequence Moore interviews Carol who's playing a dignified princess rehearsing a television toast to a noted humanitarian.
- DirectorDave PowersStarsCarol BurnettHarvey KormanVicki LawrenceHighlights of this end-of-season "family show" include: "The Doily Sisters" (a spoof on "The Dolly Sisters"); and musical numbers including Carol singing "Happiness Belongs to My Friends" and "I've Seen That Face", Harvey performing "Hey, Mr. Moon", and Carol and Vicki duetting on "Budapest, When You Get Home" and performing "Two Natural Beauties" with the dancers.