You killed Pluto and you got >> Pluto had a comment. Get over it. >> And you got Neil. Hold on. We have a lot of people. This means a lot to in this room. Hordes of angry nine-year-olds sending you letters in the early 2000s. >> Yeah. They were like 8-year-olds, too. Yeah. Yeah. And in in 2000 Yeah. In two early 2000s. I have a file cabinet drawer of pissed-off crayon squirrel. You’re not going to say, “Why did you demo? Blue, my favorite planet. Now I don’t have a favorite planet. Here’s what Pluto looks like. Put it back in the exhibit.” I mean, people, we’re given commandments to change what’s going on. The next generation, they’re born into this fact and they’re cool with it. >> All of us do. All of us grew up with Pluto as a planet in this room. >> You were in fourth grade when this happened. >> I have a letter from you. >> I think a lot of people took it as quote, I’ve heard an attack on smallalness. I’ve heard from people in this room, it proved that everything I grew up with was a lie. Do you have to like worry about these heavy attachments to what to you? I’m sure are of >> it’s a fault of how science was taught. >> Interesting. >> You’re taught there are nine planets. >> That’s not how it should have ever been taught. >> Yeah. >> So there are rocky planets, there are gaseous planets, and then there’s one odd ice ball called Pluto. We don’t know what that is. We’ll call it a planet for now. >> But surely it’s as big as the other planets, right? >> Surely, Neil, cuz I saw it on the thing that I made in third grade. It was as big as the other planet. Our moon has five times the mass of Pluto. >> A >> Deal with it. >> Yeah, I’m I’m trying. >> Do you know half of Pluto is made of ice? You bring it to where Earth is right now, heat from the sun would evaporate that ice and it would grow a tail. And that’s no kind of behavior for planets.
