Jack states that he let the members of his cast have the night off, so he goes into the audience to chat with the folks. There he finds Gisele MacKenzie, and they perform their classic violin duet.
Jack, Don and Dennis imitate Peter, Paul, and Mary in response to the folk-singing craze. Billy Graham asks Jack why comedians insult each other to get laughs, and the gang demonstrates what would ...
Dick Van Dyke says that he has been warned that Jack works his guests to death. In the skit, Jack plays an inspector investigating a murder who questions everyone in the house all played by Van Dyke.
Jack debates the psychology of sex appeal with Rock Hudson. Jack wants to do a show like Jack Paar's The Tonight Show, and illustrates the concept with the help of Hudson and Hugh Downs.
CBS is throwing a Christmas party, and Jack and Rochester give gifts to all the cast members. Mel Blanc makes his first TV appearance since his near-fatal auto accident eleven months earlier on Jan...
Jack introduces celebrities in the audience, including John Wayne. When guest singer Jaye P. Morgan appears, Wayne whispers to Jack that he wants a date with her and gets it.
Jack tells CBS executives that he wants to "broaden out" and direct a Playhouse 90 TV episode. He rehearses a dramatic scene with Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood, and chaos ensues.
Milton Berle coaches Jack on what it takes to do a weekly comedy show, including goofy outfits, lousy jokes, and when Jack wants something to sink his teeth into getting a pie in the face.
Jack discusses his trip to the Far East, including Japan's #1 announcer doing the middle commercial. The sponsors have a plan for cutting costs on the program, which leaves Jack extremely wired.
Jack mistakenly receives an invitation to a dinner at the home of Ronald and Benita Colman. Arriving in his tuxedo, he tries in vain to pretentiously fit in with the upper-crust British crowd.
Jack and his girlfriend, Mildred Meyerhauser, dress up to walk in the Easter Parade on Wilshire Boulevard. They encounter many of the usual gang of eccentrics, including Jack's long-suffering violi...