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TVTranscript
00:02Seatbelts, everyone!
00:04Please let this be a normal field trip.
00:06With a friend?
00:07No way!
00:08Cruising on the main street.
00:10You're relaxed and feeling good.
00:12Next thing that you know, you'll see it.
00:16Octopus in my neighborhood.
00:18Surfing on a sine wave.
00:20Swinging through the stars.
00:22Take a left at your intestine.
00:24Take your second right past Mars.
00:26I'm a magic scruvacus.
00:28Navigate a nostril.
00:30Climb on the magic scruvacus.
00:32Make a plainton too.
00:34On our magic scruvacus.
00:36Wrap the river of lava.
00:38On a magic scruvacus.
00:40Such a fine thing to do.
00:42So strap your bones right to the sea.
00:45Come on in and don't be shy.
00:47Just to make your day complete.
00:49You might get baked into a pie.
00:51On a magic scruvacus.
00:53Step inside, it's a wider ride.
00:56Come on!
00:57Right on the magic scruvacus!
01:07Is it finished yet, Tim?
01:09Stop rushing me, Keisha.
01:11How long can it take to make a model of the sun that plays wait till the sun shines Nelly
01:16when you wind it up?
01:18There.
01:19You think D.A.'s gonna like it?
01:22She'll love it.
01:24It's the perfect present for her birthday.
01:26Too bad she's sick and had to stay home today.
01:33Hello?
01:34How come you guys are still at school?
01:38It's D.A.
01:39Um, we're waiting for Ms. Frizzle.
01:41She's driving us over after her teacher's meeting.
01:43Well hurry!
01:44I want you to see my new telescope.
01:46It's really neat!
01:48We'll be there soon.
01:50Bye!
01:51Where is Ms. Frizzle anyway?
01:54Huh?
01:59Oh, good afternoon, class.
02:01Perfect timing, Ms. Frizzle.
02:03Tim just finished D.A.'s present.
02:05Take a look, Ms. Frizzle.
02:10Whoa!
02:12The present!
02:18Tim, are you alright?
02:20I'm okay, but D.A.'s present isn't.
02:24What are we gonna do?
02:25It's too late to make another one.
02:31Right here, right now, you can get the perfect dim from SSN, the Star Shopping Network.
02:36Hey!
02:37Check this out!
02:38It's one of those shows where you can call up and buy things.
02:42And here's your host, the stellar seller himself, Horace Cope!
02:46Evening, folks.
02:47I'm Horace Cope, bringing you the perfect dip for someone you love.
02:51A star.
02:52A star?
02:54That's right, a star.
02:56A star from the vast reaches of the universe.
02:59And when you buy a star, you get to name it.
03:03Seriously, folks, I've only got three stars left.
03:06One, two, and three.
03:08For the ridiculously low price of just $7 each.
03:14That's it.
03:15We'll all chip in a dollar and get D.A. her very own star.
03:19Great idea!
03:20Let's do it.
03:22Wait a minute.
03:24Slow down.
03:25My grandma once bought a mop from the home mopping network and it didn't mop.
03:30So I'm not spending my money on anything I haven't checked out myself.
03:34But Keisha...
03:36Keisha's right, Tim.
03:37We don't have to buy a star sight unseen.
03:41And we don't?
03:43To the bus!
03:48But what about D.A.'s party?
03:53Stop!
03:54Wait, I...
03:55Uh-oh.
03:56I hate when this happens.
04:00I'll give you a hand, Arl.
04:02We're going star shopping.
04:09Couldn't we just go to the mall?
04:31Computer, report please.
04:34All systems go, Ms. Frizzin.
04:37We are leaving the Earth behind.
04:39And here comes the moon!
04:45I mean, there goes the moon!
04:48Wow!
04:49Are we going fast or what?
04:50We just went from planet Earth to the moon in less than a minute!
04:54As my Aunt Dromeda always says, Ralphie,
04:57To reach the stars, you have to get way past Mars!
05:02Gee!
05:03Look at all those teeny-tiny stars!
05:06I wonder if they'll get bigger when we get closer.
05:09Like the moon did.
05:10They'd better.
05:11We need some way to tell them apart.
05:15Now you're probably asking,
05:17Boris Culp, how can you sell me a star if they all look alike?
05:21Right?
05:22Wrong!
05:23That's the beauty of it.
05:25Look closely and you'll see lots of different kinds of stars.
05:28For instance, take this little baby.
05:32Only two million years old.
05:35Now believe it or not, that's really young for a star.
05:38To see it, just look in the direction of the constellation, Taurus the Bull.
05:42I wouldn't steer you wrong.
05:43Ooh!
05:45Please!
05:46Who ever heard of a baby star?
05:48To see it for yourself, you'd have to fly at a speed of 500 million miles an hour.
05:54And it would still take you about 80 years just to get there.
05:58So isn't it a lot easier to just call?
06:0280 years?
06:04I told my mom I'd be home by 7.
06:06Then what are we waiting for?
06:08Hmm.
06:09Baby star, here we come.
06:23Is it just me, or do we just leave our solar system behind?
06:28Man, we've already gone so far we can't see any of the planets anymore.
06:32And now our sun looks as tiny as, well, a star.
06:37Hey, Ms. Frizzle, is our sun a star?
06:40Just like all the other stars out here?
06:43Yup.
06:44Makes you think, doesn't it?
06:46Computer, star chart please.
06:50Ah, yes.
06:51Right on course.
06:53Constellation Taurus, here we come.
06:55We should be seeing the baby star right about...
06:59Coming out of hyperdrive now.
07:07Wow!
07:09Hmm, that baby star should be around here somewhere.
07:12But it's hard to tell with all this dust and gas.
07:15Is that what these weird clouds are made of?
07:20Stellar nursery, straight ahead.
07:23Dust, gas, swirling clouds?
07:26This is not a good place for a baby.
07:29On the contrary, Phoebe, it's the best place for a baby star.
07:36Oh, wow!
07:38This new telescope is really neat.
07:40You can see practically forever.
07:47Take a look, Liz.
07:52You can even see huge clouds of dust and gas way up there.
07:59Gee, I wonder what they look like up close.
08:07That can't be our baby star.
08:09It doesn't look like what we saw on TV.
08:11You're right, Keisha.
08:12It's a ball of gas, but not a star.
08:15Whoa!
08:20What's happening?
08:21We're being sucked towards the center.
08:23Warning, warning.
08:25Due to a large ball of hot gas, we are out of control.
08:30Oh, no!
08:37At my old school, we never got pulled into the boiling hot center of a swirling cloud of dust and
08:43gas.
08:44I know, Phoebe, isn't this fantastic?
08:48Nobody's ever seen what we're seeing.
08:51Lucky nobody.
08:53What are we gonna do?
08:54What are we gonna do?
08:55What are we gonna do?
08:56What are we gonna do?
08:57Unless we want to end up where all that dust and gas is, we'd better use reverse.
09:10It worked!
09:11We're safe!
09:12Good one, Tim!
09:13Look!
09:14There's the baby star!
09:15It's been behind us the whole time!
09:18Full stop!
09:19It's too bright to look at, Ms. Frizzle.
09:22No problem, class.
09:27Whoa!
09:28For a baby star, it sure is humongous!
09:32Well, Arnold, baby stars come in all sizes.
09:35Let's see how humongous it really is, shall we?
09:46Hmm, it's actually on the small side. Only about half the size of our son.
09:51So, it's just a baby. I say let's call up Horace Cope and buy it.
09:57Wait a second, Tim. This is not a happy star.
10:04Poor thing. It looks like it's got gas.
10:07Very good, Phoebe. All stars have gas. That's what they're made of.
10:12But this two million year old baby just hasn't settled down yet.
10:16You know it's at that awkward age.
10:18Come on, Keisha. Let's buy it and go to the party.
10:22No way. I'm not spending a dime on this star. It's too young. And too wild.
10:29Keisha, what kind of star are you looking for anyway?
10:32Well, something a bit bigger and brighter with no dust around it.
10:38And it would be nice if it had a planet or two.
10:40We need a star we can trust, like our own sun.
10:44Okay, so you don't like the baby star.
10:48No problem. Remember, there are still two stars left.
10:52And this next one is sensational.
10:55A shining example of a grown-up middle-aged star.
10:59And to find it, look right here in the Big Dipper.
11:02Seats, everyone, and buckle up.
11:05Computer, how far is it?
11:08Approximately 100 million million miles.
11:12Wow!
11:17That's not all. This next star even comes with its own planets. Absolutely free.
11:24There it is, Keisha. Just the kind of star you're looking for.
11:28It looks okay, but I want to be sure it's different from the baby star.
11:33Good idea, Keisha. Let's you and I take a closer look.
11:44Buckle up, Ms. Frizzle.
11:48It's bigger and brighter than the baby star.
11:51I like the color a lot better, and it seems a lot calmer.
11:55That's because this star's all grown up, Keisha.
11:58A happy, healthy five billion years old at the prime of its life.
12:03Hmm. No dust clouds around it either.
12:06And look, it's got its own planets. I can see at least two.
12:10Wow! This star looks just like our sun. Let's buy it, Ms. Frizzle.
12:17Sold.
12:20Sold?
12:21But I haven't even dialed yet.
12:23I guess someone beat us to it. But who would want to buy our star?
12:28Congratulations, young lady, and enjoy your brand new star.
12:32What do you want to name it?
12:35Janet!
12:36Janet?
12:37I've always wanted my name up in lights, but this is even better.
12:42I can't wait to tell my cousin Arnold about it.
12:45How embarrassing.
12:47Come on, guys. We can't give up yet. There's still one more star left.
12:52And remember, there's still one star left.
12:55As you can see by this accurate artist rendition, I've saved the best for last.
13:01A red supergiant star.
13:05Look right here. Here. Here. Here. Here. Here. Here. Here in the constellation of Andromeda.
13:13So if you're in the neighborhood, check it out.
13:16Or just call. It's a lot faster.
13:20Wanna bet?
13:31According to my research, that tiny star out there is actually a red supergiant.
13:38A hundred times bigger than our sun.
13:41Because we're so far away from it, it looks like a tiny point of life.
13:45But if we were closer, it would look very, very...
13:50Humongous, stupendous, astronomical, a 20-million-year-old red supergiant.
13:59Isn't she a beauty?
14:00Tell you what, folks. Since this is my last star, I'll take 50 cents off the price if somebody buys
14:06it in the next...
14:07...50 seconds?
14:09Sounds like a good deal to me.
14:12We better call before somebody else buys it.
14:17Star Shopping Network. Horoscope speaking.
14:20Hi. I'm Tim. And I... I mean we, that is, Miss Frizzle's class, would like to...
14:25Uh, hold on a sec.
14:26Well, Keisha?
14:29Well...
14:29Keisha?
14:31Well...
14:32It's certainly the biggest star by a long shot, and I like the color.
14:36It doesn't have any planets, but there are no dust clouds, either. And it's no wild baby.
14:42So?
14:43Okay, okay. Buy it.
14:46We want to buy the red supergiant star, and name it for Dorothy Ann.
14:51So, you just bought yourselves a star, and not a bum-a-doo-doo.
14:57We did it. We got the biggest, brightest birthday present D.A.'s ever had.
15:03She'll love having a star that's so much bigger than the other stars.
15:07Wait a minute. If it's so much bigger, how come we got it so cheap?
15:11Yeah! Horace did seem in a hurry to sell it.
15:15So? Do you guys think there's something wrong with it? I don't see anything wrong.
15:19Well, as my old friend Librarian always says, you can't tell a book by its cover.
15:27Let's take a peek inside with our Sneaker Peekatron.
15:38Watch this.
15:43Amazing!
15:45We can actually see inside this star.
15:48Is it just me, or are the insides of our star shrinking?
15:52Not shrinking, Ralphie. Collapsing!
15:56Oh, no! The star's insides are getting squeezed together!
16:00Does it matter what's going on inside?
16:02It was shining just fine on the outside, and that's all D.A. will see.
16:05Core explosion imminent.
16:08Three, two, one...
16:20D.A. star! It's gone!
16:23Our big, beautiful star just exploded into smithereens!
16:32I don't believe what I just saw!
16:36I know. Wasn't it super?
16:39Super? Ms. Frizzle? D.A. star is gone!
16:43It's history! Six-fifty for nothing!
16:46But why did our star explode when it did?
16:49It looked okay on the outside.
16:51It was bigger. It was brighter.
16:54Well, Oris did say the super giant was twenty million years old.
16:58A stellar observation, Phoebe.
17:01Stars do grow old and eventually go out.
17:04But some, like this one, go out with a bang!
17:08They're called supernovas!
17:12Well, it sure left the super mess.
17:14You know, it looks a lot like the place where we found the baby star.
17:20All these leftovers from the blast are clouds.
17:23Of dust and gas!
17:25Then let's get out of here!
17:27Last time we got too close to a cloud of hot gas, we almost got fried!
17:32But, Tim! Tim! Don't you see? That hot ball of gas was a star getting ready to be born!
17:38That's right! Stars are made out of hot gases!
17:43Boingo, Phoebe! Hot gases squeezed together in a ball!
17:49Yeah!
17:51Squeezed together hot enough to make a new baby star shine!
17:55The hot gas keeps the star shining like fuel for a fire for millions and millions of years!
18:00And when the fuel finally runs out, the stars die out!
18:04And those that go out with a bang like this one leave behind the stuff to make new stars again!
18:10Excuse me, but in case you've forgotten, we still don't have a present for DA's birthday!
18:16No, but maybe we can make one!
18:20Huh?
18:21As I see it, all we have to do is help along what happens naturally.
18:26What if we gather up all the leftover gas and dust and squeeze it together till it gets hot enough
18:33to shine?
18:34Brilliant idea, Keisha. Normally it would take a million years to clean all this up.
18:39But since we do have a magic bus, it's time to take chances, sweep up the mess, and make a
18:47star!
18:59It's working, Ms. Frizzle! The dust and gas are getting smooshed together!
19:05And now, when you need a good squeeze, just say please!
19:09Please!
19:18Can you squeeze a stardust cloud into a star, into a star?
19:22Can you squeeze a stardust cloud for our DA?
19:26Oh, we can squeeze it till it's sore, and there's heat within its core!
19:30And then presto! It's ready for her birthday!
19:32Yay!
19:34Congratulations, class!
19:39Computer, set coordinates KTUR5.
19:43We're going home.
19:54Blaze, look! There's a star up there!
19:57It wasn't there before! I'm sure of it!
20:02I've gotta write about it in my star journal!
20:04Sorry we're late, DA!
20:06Blaze, you're just in time!
20:08See that really bright star up there?
20:12Well, that's a brand new star! And I just discovered it!
20:17Actually, DA, that's your birthday present from all of us!
20:22It is?
20:23We named it Dorothy Ann 1 in your honor!
20:26You did?
20:28Happy birthday, DA!
20:30Yay!
20:30Yahoo!
20:32But how? I... I don't understand!
20:37Oh, it's a long story, Dorothy Ann!
20:40A story filled with dust, and gas, with heat, and...
20:47This is a special bulletin from SSN. I've just discovered a brand new star, and it's now on sale.
20:54What?
20:55That's right. A brand new star. So let's hear those telephones ring.
21:01Keisha?
21:04Out with the old and in with the new. It's sleek. It's stylish. It's yellow.
21:11That star is ours. We just bought it.
21:14No, no. Sorry.
21:16You must be mistaken. This is a new star.
21:19That's right. And do you know where this new star came from? Because we do.
21:24Sure you do, kid.
21:25We actually saw how dust and gas came together to become a new star.
21:31And that's not all. We saw a baby star and then a middle-aged star that had been shining for
21:36a long time, like our sun.
21:37And then, thanks to you, we saw the star you sold us explode.
21:42And you knew it was on its way out.
21:45Well, maybe I did, but, uh...
21:48But what you didn't know was that if you squeeze all the dust and gas left over from the explosion
21:53and make it hot enough...
21:55You can make a brand new star. You can make a brand new star. The star you're trying to sell
21:59us now.
22:01Only that's our star, because it was made from the leftovers of the one you sold us.
22:05And they gave it to me for my birthday. And named it Dorothy Ann after me. So you can sell
22:13it.
22:13Yes. Yes. Well, uh... Thank you for pointing out my, uh... mistake.
22:19Well done, class. I couldn't have said it better myself.
22:24And I couldn't have gotten a better birthday present.
22:27Thanks, everyone.
22:29You're welcome, DA!
22:31Yay!
22:33Yay!
22:42Is this the magic school bus?
22:43Is this the magic school bus?
22:45Magic school bus?
22:46Magic school bus?
22:47Magic school bus?
22:47What do you mean? Magic school bus?
22:49Magic school bus?
22:50Magic school bus?
22:51Magic school bus?
22:52Magic school bus?
22:52Magic school bus?
22:52I want a magic school bus!
22:54I want a magic school bus!
23:08It's a fine night for looking at stars, Liz.
23:10It's clear as a bell up there.
23:14Now, who would be calling at this hour?
23:16Hello.
23:17Is this the star of the Magic School Bus?
23:21Well, I am the producer.
23:23Good.
23:24About your show on stars.
23:25No one can visit the stars for flying space bus.
23:28Who are you trying to kid?
23:29Well, even though astronauts have been to the moon and back, you're right.
23:33The stars are just too far away to reach with today's spacecraft.
23:37Okay, but suppose we did build a spacecraft.
23:40How long would it take to get there?
23:43A lifetime.
23:44The stars in our show were so far away that to get there and back before you grew old,
23:49you'd have to travel faster than the speed of light.
23:52And you can't travel faster than the speed of light.
23:55But Ms. Frizzle took the kids there.
23:57Hey, that's why she drives the Magic School Bus.
24:00It was the only way to get there.
24:02Well, there's something else bothering me.
24:05Since our sun is a star, well, you know, it's not going to...
24:10Go out?
24:11Well, yeah, it will, but not for a long, long time.
24:15It's been shining for over 4 billion years, and it's got another 4 or 5 billion years to go.
24:21Whew, that's early.
24:24One more question.
24:25You guys sure made that new star in a hurry.
24:28How long does it really take?
24:30It takes millions of years to form a new star from the leftovers of an old one.
24:36Millions of years in a couple of minutes?
24:39You guys are always speeding up time.
24:41But this show takes the cake.
24:43You mean Liz takes the cake.
24:48You're right.
24:49Good night.
24:50You ready, Liz?
24:54Perfect.
24:56A new constellation.
24:57The Constellation Magic School Bus.
25:10Surfing on a sine wave, swinging through the stars.
25:14Take a left at your intestine, take your second right past Mars.
25:18I'm a magic school bus.
25:20Affigate a nostril.
25:22I'm a magic school bus.
25:24Make a plane turn to.
25:26I'm a magic school bus.
25:28Rock the river of love.
25:30On a magic school bus.
25:32Such a fine thing to do.
25:34So strap your bones right to the sea.
25:37Come on in and don't be shy.
25:39Just to make your day complete.
25:41You might get baked into a pie.
25:43On a magic school bus.
25:45Step inside, it's a wild ride.
25:48Right on the magic school bus.
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