 Okay, let's try this problem. What type of reaction is this going to be, do you guys think? Since we've been going over elimination reactions. E1. E1, right? Why is that? Oh, which is a bad leaving group. Oh, a bad leaving group? We're turning it into a good leaving group with the sulfuric acid, right? And we're going to get an alkene. So, what are that? How many products are we going to get from this reaction? Two. So, is there going to be one as a major product and one as a minor product? Okay, so help me out. What are the products? That's one product there. It's the two products you wrote. If you're not writing them, then you're not helping yourself out, even if you're getting them wrong. Okay, it's important to write them out. Okay, so here I'll answer questions in a second, okay? So, which one of these would be the Zaitsev product? The left or the right? Left. Left. So, what does that mean? More substituted. More substituted or more stable or the major product, whichever way you want to think about it. It's really the more substituted is the way to say the Zaitsev, but it turns out to be the major product. Okay. So, why is this one more substituted than this one? We'll ask, how many substituents do we have around in the dial here? Thirty-three. Thirty-three and here? Two. Two. So, this one's more stable than this one. So, we would say this is the major product, and we would say this is the minor product. We can kill it, if you don't.