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Aired 9- 9:45a ET</p> <p class="cnnBodyText">Aired November 29, 2024 - 09:00 ET</p> <p class="cnnBodyText">THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.</p> <p class="cnnBodyText"><br/>[09:00:00]<br/> <br/>(COMMERCIAL BREAK)<br/> <br/>ELENI GIOKOS, CNN HOST, CONNECT THE WORLD: This is the scene in Paris, where five years after a fire ravaged, Notre Dame, the iconic jewel, is <br/> <br/> rebuilt and ready to reopen. It is 03:00 p.m. in the French capital, it is 06:00 p.m. here in Abu Dhabi. I'm Eleni Giokos. This is "Connect the <br/> <br/> World".<br/> <br/>Also coming up, the Israeli Prime Minister is not ready to end the war in Gaza unless Hamas is defeated. We are live in Tel Aviv. Ukraine is reeling <br/> <br/> after Russia launches a second night of attacks will survey the damage that day after more than 1 million Ukrainian homes were left in the dark. Also, <br/> <br/> the holiday shopping season is here, and millions of people are looking for bargains on Black Friday.<br/> <br/>Right. The stock markets in New York will open in around 30 minutes from now. The arrows are currently all pointing upwards as you can see, we're in <br/> <br/> the green. And there was no trading on Thanksgiving Day yesterday, and the market will close early today, remembering that the DOW has closed off its <br/> <br/> best month of 2024.<br/> <br/>And as you can see, the rally will be continuing today. Right, moving on. And there is joy in Paris this hour, we are getting our first glimpse <br/> <br/> inside the Notre Dame Cathedral, more than five years after catastrophic fire ripped through it. Earlier today, French President Emmanuel Macron <br/> <br/> invited the world to join him on a televised tour as France celebrates the landmarks restoration.<br/> <br/>The 2019 fire was a major setback for France, and Mr. Macron vowed back then that iconic cathedral would be rebuilt and be, quote, more beautiful <br/> <br/> than before.<br/> <br/>(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)<br/> <br/>EMMANUEL MACRON, FRENCH PRESIDENT: I tell you tonight with strength, we are a nation of -- We have so much to reconstruct. So yes, we will rebuild <br/> <br/> Notre Dame, even more beautiful, and I want that to be done in the next five years. We can do it.<br/> <br/>(END VIDEO CLIP)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Right, the cathedral's formal reopening is set for December 7, even though the $738 million restoration project will not be finished by then. <br/> <br/> CNN's Melissa Bell joins us now from Paris. Melissa, great to have you on the ground. I'm sure a lot of excitement where you are.<br/> <br/>I have to say, I was in Paris earlier this year, and I saw the scaffolding as they were working behind the scenes. And now you've got caught a <br/> <br/> glimpse. We've seen some of those images. Tell us what we can expect going forward.<br/> <br/>MELISSA BELL, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: It really was a sneak preview, Eleni, because the real opening, the official opening, won't <br/> <br/> happen till next Saturday, with the first mass next Sunday. But as you can see, so much of that scaffolding remains and will remain on the outside.<br/> <br/>The actual full renovation restoration won't be done until 2030. But still, the cathedral opening, as Emmanuel Macron had promised, and few had <br/> <br/> believed that it was possible when he said it just over five years ago. Five years after those flames had engulfed such a huge part of its roof.<br/> <br/>You'll remember taking down the spire, causing such damage that there had been questions that evening, in the days afterwards, whether parts of the <br/> <br/> structure, and specifically the towers on the front facade, would stand. And it took a couple of years of just securing the building to make sure <br/> <br/> that it would remain intact.<br/> <br/>So, all the more remarkable, what I had the great good fortune of witnessing today, which is an interior not just still standing, but <br/> <br/> entirely restored and to a sort of splendor far greater than that of five years ago. You'll remember before that Notre Dame was huge, its scale, <br/> <br/> extraordinary, its detail intricate, but it was dark.<br/> <br/>There was -- it was somber inside. Now there is this sense of light of luminosity, and you can see the intricacy of the artwork and the splendor <br/> <br/> of the entire thing. It's quite extraordinary. It's been achieved. The French President was here today, not just to take the cameras inside on a <br/> <br/> last visit of the construction site, thereby giving us this neat preview, but also to thank the 2000 men and women who have been so closely involved <br/> <br/> in that labor of love.<br/> <br/>It's taken so many people, so much time, 2000 oak trees to rebuild the roof exactly as it was. And he was really very moved as he spoke to them, not <br/> <br/> just to the fact that they had managed to do it on time, but he told them also, Eleni, that they had been on the construction site of the century, <br/> <br/> that they had been the alchemists of that site, and turned it into something quite extraordinary.<br/> <br/>And really it is returned to a magnificence even that was not there five years ago. So, an extraordinary feat, and one that few have believed could <br/> <br/> be achieved in just five years.<br/> <br/>[09:05:00]<br/> <br/>The grand opening though next week, when the general public will be able to get back inside to discover what's been achieved, Eleni.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah, I mean, it's truly beautiful. I'm seeing some of those images. I have to say, I'm quite jealous that you got a sneak preview of <br/> <br/> that. You know, one thing I remember just how catastrophic the fire was. I think everyone was glued to their screens at the time, and we saw that <br/> <br/> iconic spire falling to the ground, and the incredible craftsmanship, Melissa, that it required to rebuild that to the original specifications.<br/> <br/>BELL: That's right, you'll remember the night of the fire, because the images on social media and then from cameras are like ours had followed <br/> <br/> from the first few minutes with the Gulf the flames that engulfed the roof. Crowds had formed all around the -- city, where Notre Dame is positioned to <br/> <br/> watch it.<br/> <br/>And it was the moment when the spire fell that you could hear the cries of the crowd as they watched it go down. And that spire, of course, 19th <br/> <br/> century, a reminder of how different parts of this cathedral were built at different times. When we were able to come back in 2021 there was a huge <br/> <br/> hole at the top of the cathedral.<br/> <br/>Everything was happening sort of outdoors where the spire had been. Now the spire reconstructed, and the interior entirely closed off. And again, you <br/> <br/> have a sense of a cathedral that is reborn in a way that you couldn't have imagined, really when you looked at the damage that had been caused. Some <br/> <br/> of those relics, some of the statues, the statue of Virgin Mary, the organ, for instance, that had to be entirely rebuilt.<br/> <br/>The most important relic of Notre Dame, which is the crown of thorns, which had been kept here since the revolution, that had been taken out intact and <br/> <br/> miraculously saved, brought back now and exposed in a new way, with a sculpture, for instance, around the crown of thorns entirely of gold to put <br/> <br/> it, to make it more visible than even it was before.<br/> <br/>So, the individual works of art inside, not just restored their former -- beauty, but in some cases, really reinvented entirely. And the result is <br/> <br/> something that is luminous and colorful and full of gold.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah.<br/> <br/>BELL: And not the sort of somber black of Notre Dame as we remember that before, Eleni.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: All right, Melissa Bell, great to have you on the ground there. Thank you so much. I want to take you now to Syria, where opposition forces <br/> <br/> say they have entered Aleppo after rebels launch a surprise offensive and the government-controlled city for the first time in years.<br/> <br/>A statement by a newly formed rebel umbrella coalition says clashes with Syrian forces intensified overnight into Friday morning. The rebels and <br/> <br/> Bashar al-Assad's regime had agreed to a cease fire, mediated by Russia and Turkey in March 2020. CNN's Senior International Correspondent Ben Wedeman <br/> <br/> has covered Syria extensively over the course of his career.<br/> <br/>He joins us now to give us some perspective on the latest development. Ben, this is the first major escalation in Syria in around seven years. Rebels <br/> <br/> claiming to have taken control of Aleppo's Western countryside. What is the latest?<br/> <br/>BEN WEDEMAN, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Yes, what we're hearing from Aleppo is they've now entered the new Aleppo neighborhood as <br/> <br/> well as the Hamdaniya neighborhood on the western side of the city. This comes after they launched this sort of coalition of rebel groups led by <br/> <br/> Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, which is a rebel group that, at one point was affiliated with al Qaeda.<br/> <br/>But they launched this lightning offensive on Wednesday. And since then, they've taken, according to them, 63 villages to the west of Aleppo, which <br/> <br/> of course, is Syria's second largest city, and they say they have now entered the western edge of the city.<br/> <br/>This is an offensive that comes after keeping in mind, of course, that the rebels lost control of most of Aleppo back in 2016. And there's been <br/> <br/> basically a stalemate since March of 2020 when Russia and Turkey worked out a cease fire agreement for the northern part of Syria.<br/> <br/>Now, there have been clashes among the rebel groups themselves, but it appears that they've put their differences behind perhaps to exploit the <br/> <br/> fact that, for instance, Hezbollah, which was a major backer of the regime of Bashar al-Assad, essentially pulled out of Syria starting in October of <br/> <br/> last year, when they focused their fire on Israel. And of course, other backers of the Syrian regime.<br/> <br/>[09:10:00]<br/> <br/>For instance, Iran has been distracted by its involvement in hostile activities with Israel. And Russia has been distracted by its war in <br/> <br/> Ukraine. And therefore, perhaps these rebel groups are seeing this as a golden opportunity to target a weakened Syrian regime, a regime that <br/> <br/> doesn't have the kind of backing that it enjoyed going back to, for instance, 2015 when the Russians became directly involved in bolstering the <br/> <br/> regime of Bashar al-Assad.<br/> <br/>So certainly, this does represent a dramatic change on the ground in an area where the Syrian regime was starting to feel fairly confident. They've <br/> <br/> been trying to rebuild parts of old Aleppo that were severely damaged in the civil war that's been going on there since 2012, but it does appear <br/> <br/> that the regime has been taken by surprise by this rebel offensive, Eleni.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Indeed! I mean, a huge surprise, and they're calling it a shock offensive. What is their aim, Ben? And as you say, they're feeling <br/> <br/> emboldened now that Hezbollah and Iran are distracted with their own worries, specifically in what we seeing in Lebanon. So, what is their aim <br/> <br/> right now?<br/> <br/>WEDEMAN: Well, what they've said this the military operations command, which is the name of this umbrella for this coalition of rebel groups. They <br/> <br/> said that their aim was to stop Russian and Syrian regime forces from targeting Idlib province and parts of Western Aleppo province that are <br/> <br/> under the rebel control that they've been targeted by Russian and regime artillery and air strikes.<br/> <br/>So, they say that the purpose was to put an end to those strikes. But clearly, they see that the regime is feeling exposed, that it doesn't have <br/> <br/> the kind of backing that it had until quite recently. And clearly, they're seeing that this is an opportunity to go after, to try to retake Aleppo, <br/> <br/> which, of course, keep in mind, it's not only the second largest city in Syria.<br/> <br/>It really is the industrial heartland of rather the industrial sort of center of Syria. And it would be a major achievement for them to retake <br/> <br/> that city and after a period when it was thought that the opposition was essentially isolated in Idlib province, and the regime was slowly regaining <br/> <br/> control of some of the country. Keep in mind, of course, that Syria has in addition to the rebels.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah.<br/> <br/>WEDEMAN: There's a Turkish military presence, an American military presence, a Russian military presence. Basically, the country is cut up in <br/> <br/> pieces, and the regime's control at the best of times has been tenuous in many parts of the country.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Ben Wedeman, always great to see you. Thank you so much. Well, day three of the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire is largely holding, even as both <br/> <br/> sides accuse the other of violations, while thousands of displaced Lebanese civilians return home. Israel's military is warning residents of 70 <br/> <br/> villages in Southern Lebanon not to go back due to what a spokesman calls safety concerns.<br/> <br/>And a Senior Israeli Official tells CNN, the IDF could take unilateral action against Hezbollah if it perceives immediate threats from the group <br/> <br/> in that area. This as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he's ready for a ceasefire in Gaza at any moment, but not ready to end the war <br/> <br/> until Hamas is eliminated.<br/> <br/>Jeremy Diamond is connecting us from Tel Aviv. Jeremy, good to see you. Look three days in, to the cease fire, both sides accusing each other <br/> <br/> violations. The big question is, will the cease fire hold?<br/> <br/>JEREMY DIAMOND, CNN JERUSALEM CORRESPONDENT: Yeah, that's exactly right. And for now, it is despite the fact that both sides have been claiming <br/> <br/> violations by the other at this stage. And listen, when we listen to Israeli officials, including the Israeli Prime Minister, in an interview <br/> <br/> last night, they are trumpeting the fact that they are -- that they feel like they have the right and the ability to unilaterally enforce this cease <br/> <br/> fire by striking at Hezbollah when they see fit.<br/> <br/>And that is both a political message for the residents of Northern Israel who have been extraordinarily skeptical of this cease fire deal with <br/> <br/> Hezbollah, but it is also, of course, also a message to Hezbollah itself, which in the wake of the 2006 cease fire between these two sides.<br/> <br/>[09:15:00]<br/> <br/>In the years after that, we saw Hezbollah covertly re infiltrate Southern Lebanon and build up military positions there, which the Israeli military <br/> <br/> then dismantled in large part during this latest conflict between the two sides. Now I did speak with a Senior Israeli Official who provided a little <br/> <br/> bit more detail about when and how Israel feels it can act unilaterally to, as they describe it, enforce the cease fire.<br/> <br/>And this official said that on the one hand, it is if Israel perceives that there is an immediate threat, meaning militants preparing to fire rockets <br/> <br/> on Israel, for example, or if the target is time critical, meaning something that Israeli intelligence or military have seen, but fear that <br/> <br/> they may lose that target if they allow too much time to pass by.<br/> <br/>When it comes to southern Lebanon, this Senior Israeli Official said that Israel believes it has the right to act against any threat for any reason <br/> <br/> when it comes to Northern Lebanon, however, that is where the Israeli government is going to work much more through this new U.S. led monitoring <br/> <br/> mechanism.<br/> <br/>It's not exactly clear how frequently they intend to work through that mechanism when it comes to Southern Lebanon, and clearly, they feel like <br/> <br/> they have a much freer hand in the areas closer to their border. But this is the risky gambit here, in the way in which the cease fire agreement was <br/> <br/> put together, and what the Israeli government feels that they can do.<br/> <br/>And that is the fact that you have a party to this conflict, a party to the cease fire agreement, that is doing the enforcement of the cease fire <br/> <br/> itself. And that's not in the agreement between these two sides, but it is something that the United States has provided separate assurances to Israel <br/> <br/> about that it understands that Israel still has the right to defend itself and the right to take these kinds of actions unilaterally.<br/> <br/>But how that is perceived by Hezbollah, how that is perceived by the Lebanese government, which has already accused Israel of violating the <br/> <br/> cease fire multiple times, that may be the trickier part, and that may be where you could see these kinds of unilateral actions by Israel trigger <br/> <br/> some kind of escalation here.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah. All right, Jeremy Diamond for us in Tel Aviv. Good to see you. And still to come, why U.S. President Joe Biden has issued a warning <br/> <br/> against Donald Trump's tariff plan details straight ahead. And reaction from the social media giants after Australia bans the platforms for kids <br/> <br/> under the age of 16. We'll be right back.<br/> <br/>(COMMERCIAL BREAK)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Welcome back now for the first time since Donald Trump won re- election, the Current U.S. President has issued a warning about his policy plans. Joe Biden says that Trump's threat to impose steep tariffs on <br/> <br/> America's neighbors would be a mistake. CNN's Arlette Saenz has the story for us.<br/> <br/>[09:20:00]<br/> <br/>ARLETTE SAENZ, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: President Joe Biden weighed in on President-Elect Trump's tariff threats for the first time, saying he <br/> <br/> hopes he will rethink some of the tariffs he wants to impose on Canada and Mexico, warning that it could jeopardize U.S. relations with some of the <br/> <br/> country's closest allies.<br/> <br/>President Biden was speaking to reporters as he visited a firehouse here in Nantucket, Massachusetts, really offering his first criticism of President-<br/> <br/> Elect Donald Trump and his policy proposals since the November 5th election. Take a listen.<br/> <br/>(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)<br/> <br/>JOE BIDEN, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: I hope he rethinks it. I think it's a counterproductive thing to do. You know, look, one of <br/> <br/> the things you've heard me say before is that we have a usual situation in America. We are surrounded by the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and <br/> <br/> two allies, Mexico and Canada. And the last thing we need to do is screw up those relationships.<br/> <br/>(END VIDEO CLIP)<br/> <br/>SAENZ: These comments from President Biden are significant and really serve as a reminder that he has very different views from President-Elect Donald <br/> <br/> Trump about how to approach issues like the economy, trade and also relations with U.S. allies. The president and Democrats during the campaign <br/> <br/> had warned that some of Trump's tariff threats would have inflationary impacts back at home.<br/> <br/>Could potentially raise prices on goods across the board for Americans. But President Biden made these comments as he's spending the Thanksgiving <br/> <br/> holiday here in Nantucket, Massachusetts. This is a bit of a family tradition for the Biden clan, as they have been traveling to this island <br/> <br/> for decades now to celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday.<br/> <br/>But it is a poignant one, as President Biden is preparing to leave office in January. He placed a round of calls to troops who were serving overseas <br/> <br/> this Thanksgiving holiday away from their families, calling into bases across the world, including in Guam, Bahrain and also Saudi Arabia, trying <br/> <br/> to thank those U.S. service members for their time.<br/> <br/>President Biden told reporters that he is most thankful this holiday season for a peaceful transfer of power, for diplomatic efforts, and also a hope <br/> <br/> that they could try to achieve more progress when it comes to the conflicts in the Middle East, as Biden is trying to work towards a hostage and cease <br/> <br/> fire deal in Gaza. Arlette Saenz, CNN, traveling with the president in Nantucket, Massachusetts.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Ukraine is reporting another wave of intense attacks. The air force says Russia launched more than 130 drones overnight across the country. <br/> <br/> Several people have been reported injured. Now this comes just after Russia targeted critical Ukrainian energy sites.<br/> <br/>An attack Thursday has left more than 1 million homes without power, caused rolling blackouts. And Russian President Vladimir Putin is threatening to <br/> <br/> hit Ukraine again with a powerful new weapon. CNN's Fred Pleitgen has more for us.<br/> <br/>(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>FREDERIK PLEITGEN, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): In the early warning hours, Russia launching yet more massive aerial strikes <br/> <br/> against Ukraine. The sheer size of the attack, more than 90 missiles and about 100 drones laid out clearly by the Russian President himself. On our <br/> <br/> part, these strikes took place in response to the continuous strikes on Russian territory by American ATACMS missiles, Putin said.<br/> <br/>As I have said many times, there will always be a response from our side. The Russians irate as the Ukrainians continue to use U.S. supplied attack <br/> <br/> on surface-to-surface missiles to hit targets deep inside Russia after getting the go ahead from the Biden Administration. Top Russian politicians <br/> <br/> now accusing the U.S. President of playing with fire.<br/> <br/>PLEITGEN: How big do you see the danger of escalation right now?<br/> <br/>KONSTANTIN KOSACHEV, DEPUTY SPEAKER OF RUSSIAN FEDERATION COUNCIL: I believe we are right now in the most dangerous stage for the simple reason, <br/> <br/> we have a lame duck in the United States of America, with all my respect to Mr. Biden.<br/> <br/>PLEITGEN (voice-over): And the Kremlin threatening further use of their massive, experimental, multiple warhead ballistic missile Oreshnik, which <br/> <br/> they fired on the Ukrainian city, Dnipro, last week. Everything that is in the epicenter of the explosion will be decimated, Putin said.<br/> <br/>Turned into elementary particles, essentially into dust. The missile hits even well protected objects located at great depth. This as Moscow is <br/> <br/> trying to maintain support at home for what it still calls its special military operation in Ukraine. The Defense Ministry publishing the slickly <br/> <br/> produced video urging Russians to join the army.<br/> <br/>We are with our warriors until victory. This is our land, the narration says. The Kremlin has said Vladimir Putin is willing to talk to U.S. <br/> <br/> President-Elect Donald Trump both about ending the Ukraine war and improving U.S.-Russia relations, but they want Washington to make the first <br/> <br/> move. The spokeswoman for Russia's Foreign Ministry tells me.<br/> <br/>[09:25:00]<br/> <br/>MARIA ZAKHAROVA, SPOKESPERSON OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY: We are open to normal relationships which are based on mutual respect and international <br/> <br/> law. If the country, I don't know, United States or other countries, would like to, on this base to improve, to promote, to develop, to reconstruct, <br/> <br/> rebuild relationship with us. We can do this.<br/> <br/>PLEITGEN (voice-over): Scores of Ukrainians spent Thursday morning sheltering from Moscow's latest missile blitz, and despite Kyiv saying they <br/> <br/> were able to shoot down many drones and rockets, more than a million people had to deal with blackouts after the raids. Fred Pleitgen, CNN, Moscow.<br/> <br/>(END VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: In a world first law, Australia has approved a social media ban for children under 16, a trial will run beginning January, after which social <br/> <br/> media platforms will be required to stop minors from logging on or face fines into the millions of dollars. CNN's Hanako Montgomery has more on the <br/> <br/> bill and its controversy.<br/> <br/>(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>HANAKO MONTGOMERY, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): How kids use social media is a problem, millions of parents' face. And Australia says it's now <br/> <br/> found the solution.<br/> <br/>ANTHONY ALBANESE, AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER: World leading action to make sure social media companies meet their social responsibility. Social media <br/> <br/> is doing harm to our children.<br/> <br/>MONTGOMERY (voice-over): Under Australia's new law, kids under 16 are banned from accessing social media platforms. And tech companies breaking <br/> <br/> the rules could face fines in the tens of millions.<br/> <br/>MONTGOMERY (on camera): But the bill rushed through in just a week is drawing criticism from those not convinced it will keep kids off the <br/> <br/> internet.<br/> <br/>SARAH HANSON-YOUNG, AUSTRALIAN SENATOR: I mean, it's almost embarrassing. I mean, this is boomers trying to tell young people how the internet should <br/> <br/> work.<br/> <br/>MONTGOMERY (voice-over): Tech giants, including Meta and X's Elon Musk argue more time and evidence are needed before enforcing the ban. But for <br/> <br/> some parents, the law couldn't come fast enough.<br/> <br/>KELLY O'BRIEN, MOTHER OF CHARLOTTE O'BRIEN: I will miss your hugs, your kisses, your laugh, your beautiful, beautiful smile.<br/> <br/>MONTGOMERY (voice-over): 12-year-old Charlotte O'Brien took her own life. Her parents say, after years of being bullied online, cases like hers and <br/> <br/> Allem Halkic, who ended his life at 17, have driven Australia's push to protect kids from online harm.<br/> <br/>ALI HALKIC, FATHER OF ALLEM HALKIC: If that was in place today, and I know he would be alive and that's some the guilt that I have to live with every <br/> <br/> day.<br/> <br/>MONTGOMERY (voice-over): Australia's new law is divisive, but for grieving families, it's a fight worth leading. Hanako Montgomery, CNN.<br/> <br/>(END VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: And so ahead, retailers plan for this day, all year will be live from New Jersey, where shoppers are on a mission to hunt down door buster <br/> <br/> deals this Black Friday. We'll bring you in updates, right after the short break. Stay with CNN.<br/> <br/>(COMMERCIAL BREAK)<br/> <br/>[09:30:00]<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Welcome back. I'm Eleni Giokos in Abu Dhabi, and you're watching "Connect the World". Markets just started trade in New York, and of course, <br/> <br/> they've got a very short trading day today, just 3.5 hours. And let's take a look to see those opening numbers. As you can see, all in the green, it <br/> <br/> is expected we'll see very low liquidity today.<br/> <br/>And of course, because it is the big holiday weekend, Thanksgiving yesterday, today is Black Friday. But again, the DOW JONES actually coming <br/> <br/> off its best month for 2024. In the meantime, the race to the cash register is officially on today. Black Friday is the official start of the holiday <br/> <br/> shopping season in the United States.<br/> <br/>It's also one of the biggest shopping days of the year. Retailers count on it to help meet their bottom line. Analysts predict more than 180 million <br/> <br/> shoppers are expected to hit the stores, either in person or online, this weekend, and the hunt for big bargains, and that is expected to be a record <br/> <br/> turnout.<br/> <br/>CNN's Meena Duerson joins us now, to give us a bit of a taste of what's going on in shopping centers. And in fact, you're out with shoppers in East <br/> <br/> Rutherford, New Jersey. And Meena, I want you to tell me what we're seeing. I know a lot of people opting for online. They don't want the drama in the <br/> <br/> store, but some actually do enjoy it. So, what can you tell us?<br/> <br/>MEENA DUERSON, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Yeah, so actually, you know about 65 percent of those shoppers who are projected to shop this weekend said they <br/> <br/> would be doing that in person. So, we should be seeing a fair amount of foot traffic in the stores. We're out in the mall in New Jersey, and there <br/> <br/> are a decent number of crowds here.<br/> <br/>When we spoke to shoppers, you know, people said they do still enjoy coming to the mall. They do still like touching things. You know, they're looking <br/> <br/> for items, you know, for gifts. Maybe they're trying to find deals in person. A lot of people said maybe they feel a little more skeptical about <br/> <br/> some of the deals that they see online, but they do trust things in the stores that they see.<br/> <br/>So, they are interested in, you know, coming and checking out maybe some offers in person. We did see people getting some of these door buster deals <br/> <br/> at some of these stores in person where they can take advantage of some, you know, offers or deals that are available in person that maybe are not <br/> <br/> online. So that's a little bit of what we're seeing in person today. You know, here in the mall.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: I hope you get some time to do some shopping yourself, by the way. But I have to ask you, I mean, you know, a lot of people in the United <br/> <br/> States voted for Donald Trump. And of course, the big issue on what it is going to mean for the economy. One of the big unknowns is how tariffs is <br/> <br/> going to affect inflation down the line. Is that bearing any influence in the way that people are shopping today?<br/> <br/>DUERSON: Well, you know, I think it's probably a little bit too early to tell, but what we are hearing, you know, from experts, is that there is, <br/> <br/> you know, some anticipation of some big-ticket items that will probably cost a little bit more down the line. So, there are some projections that <br/> <br/> some of these household items or electronics.<br/> <br/>Things that are manufactured overseas, China, Canada, Mexico, places where the tariffs are likely to take effect to impact consumer prices here, that <br/> <br/> those are maybe items that will become more expensive, you know, post Inauguration Day. So those are things that experts are saying, if those are <br/> <br/> items on your shopping list.<br/> <br/>You know, if you're in the market for a new smartphone, a new tablet, a new laptop, an E-bike, let's say, a washing machine, a fridge, those are things <br/> <br/> maybe you should be looking out for those deals and taking advantage of purchasing right now before those tariffs do go into effect. So, if <br/> <br/> consumers are paying attention to that, then perhaps they will be taking advantage of those deals, you know, right now.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Well, Meena, I would say, have a good day of shopping, but I should rather say, have a good day watching people shopping, and we'll see you <br/> <br/> soon looking forward to more updates as the day goes on. All right, with CNN's Meena Duerson for us. I want to get you up to speed now and some <br/> <br/> other stories that are on our radar right now.<br/> <br/>Ireland is holding parliamentary elections today with two center right parties on track to maintain a governing coalition, but it's not a <br/> <br/> guarantee, after video of Prime Minister Simon Harris walking away from a visibly upset care worker went viral. A poll taken after that showed a <br/> <br/> drop-in support for his party, leaving the results in doubt.<br/> <br/>Protesters clashing with police in Tbilisi, Georgia over the government's decision to suspend membership talks with the European Union. The country <br/> <br/> has been in turmoil since last month's disputed elections, which the pro EU opposition said were falsified.<br/> <br/>[09:35:00]<br/> <br/>And the family of a long-time state media journalist in China says he's been sentenced to seven years in prison. That's according to Reuters. He <br/> <br/> was detained for alleged spying back in 2022, he frequently met in person with foreign diplomats as well as journalists. And still to come, why Ruben <br/> <br/> Amorim is the man of the moment at Manchester United? Details coming up right after the short break.<br/> <br/>(COMMERCIAL BREAK)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: The quest to live longer and healthier lives, rather, is fueling a multi-million-dollar industry, wellness industry, which, of course, is <br/> <br/> growing significantly from Silicon Valley billionaires to everyday people. There's a growing fascination with the potential of science to defy aging. <br/> <br/> Our Anna Stewart is finding out more about those longevity treatments for CNN's "Decoded" series.<br/> <br/>(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>ANNA STEWART, CNN REPORTER (voice-over): In the last year, I've been on a health and fitness challenge.<br/> <br/>STEWART: I don't think of myself as a bio hacker, but I do take quite a few supplements each day. And I just say all of these have been recommended to <br/> <br/> me by a physician and a nutritionist, but I wouldn't recommend anyone just takes things I take, which include multivitamins, three times a day that <br/> <br/> has vitamin D, metal folate, a few bits and bobs. In addition to that, I have something called NMN powder, which is a precursor to NAD, hold up.<br/> <br/>STEWART (voice-over): I should probably explain NAD plus is a vital coenzyme that helps our cells create energy. In fact, it works like a <br/> <br/> shuttle bus, picking up electrons and transporting them to the mitochondria in our cells. Typically, as we get older, our bodies produce less and less <br/> <br/> NAD+.<br/> <br/>And when there are too few shuttle busses, the lack of energy slows our metabolism and all cell repairs. This makes us age. Luckily, you can now <br/> <br/> boost your NAD levels through IV infusions or oral supplements. And the best part is clinical trials have proven that restoring NAD improves <br/> <br/> cardiovascular function, cognitive function, and can even slow that pesky phenomenon called aging.<br/> <br/>Leonard Guarente has produced an NAD booster made from the natural compound often found in milk, nicotinamide, riboside or NR.<br/> <br/>LEONARD GUARENTE, NOVARTIS PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY AT MIT: So, developed a product that had NR at a dose that we thought it would just again in older <br/> <br/> people, it would bring their NAD levels back up to youthful levels, not overshoot it, but just to youthful levels. And so, we did a human trial.<br/> <br/>STEWART: How many people?<br/> <br/>GUARENTE: I think it was 200 now.<br/> <br/>[09:40:00]<br/> <br/>STEWART: You say, OK, but does it slow down aging?<br/> <br/>GUARENTE: Yes, have they lived longer? That's what I want to know. <br/> <br/>STEWART: How long would that take?<br/> <br/>GUARENTE: That'll take a while. That'll take a while to know.<br/> <br/>STEWART: I'm here to see Dr. Allen (ph).<br/> <br/>STEWART (voice-over): To see if my own lifestyle changes have worked. I'm heading to a longevity clinic in Dubai.<br/> <br/>UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Wide open --<br/> <br/>STEWART (voice-over): This must be quite the flattering view.<br/> <br/>UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's it.<br/> <br/>STEWART: That's it.<br/> <br/>UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yeah.<br/> <br/>STEWART: That's all you need to know how long my telomeres are?<br/> <br/>STEWART (voice-over): Telomeres, I've learnt, are protective caps at the ends of chromosomes. Recording their length will determine my biological <br/> <br/> age.<br/> <br/>STEWART: I'm really hoping to be 20 years old, again, from the inside.<br/> <br/>STEWART (voice-over): And catch the full show of "Decoded" to find out whether those hopes were dashed or realized. Anna Stewart, CNN, Dubai.<br/> <br/>(END VIDEOTAPE)<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: All right, the outcome of last night's Europa League game at Old Trafford was at times in doubt, but in the end, Manchester United beat <br/> <br/> Norway's champions BODO/GLIMT, but the fans focus was on Ruben Amorim Man U's new head coach. It was his first home game. It wasn't a bad start. and <br/> <br/> Amanda Davies is going to tell us a lot more about it. Amanda, good to see you.<br/> <br/>AMANDA DAVIES, CNN WORLD SPORT: Yeah, hi. There was no escaping the relief that Ruben Amorim felt after finally getting Manchester United over the <br/> <br/> line in just his second game in charge.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah.<br/> <br/>DAVIES: He only had four full training sessions with the team heading into this European encounter. He admitted he was feeling the pressure. He <br/> <br/> doesn't know the players that well. The players don't know him that well.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah.<br/> <br/>DAVIES: But I think it's fair to say, United have been in such problematic times. The feeling is the only way is up. That was their eighth win they've <br/> <br/> recorded since August. It was in the Europa League. The question now is whether they can build some momentum. Take it into the Premier League.<br/> <br/>They're up against Everton on Sunday. United have only won 4 of their 12 games so far this season. So, we've got to look ahead to what we can take <br/> <br/> from it.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Yeah.<br/> <br/>DAVIES: What more there is to come in "World Sport" in just a couple of minutes, Eleni.<br/> <br/>GIOKOS: Right, fantastic! Looking forward to your update, Amanda. We'll see you after the break, and I'll be back at the top of the hour with more <br/> <br/> news. Stay with CNN.<br/> <br/>(COMMERCIAL BREAK)<br/> <br/>[09:45:00]<br/> <br/>(WORLD SPORT)<br/> <br/>END<br/> <br/></p> </div></td> </tr> </table> <!-- /Content --> </div><!-- /cnnBoxContent --> <div class="cnnBoxFooter"><div></div></div> </div><!-- /cnnWCBox --> <div class="clear"><img src="/assets/1.gif" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt=""/></div> </div><!-- /cnnReskin --> </div><!-- /cnnMainContent --> </div><!-- /cnnContentContainer --> <script>var CNN = CNN || {}; </script> <div class="cnn-js-chrome-wrapper"> <div class="cnn-js-navigation" data-type="footer"></div> </div> <script type="text/javascript" src="//lightning.cnn.com/launch/7be62238e4c3/97fa00444124/launch-2878c87af5e3.min.js"></script> </div><!-- /cnnContainer --> <img src="//cdn.cnn.com/cnn/images/1.gif" alt="" id="TargetImage" name="TargetImage" width="1" height="1" onLoad="getAdHeadCookie(this)"><img src="//cdn.cnn.com/cnn/images/1.gif" alt="" id="TargetImageDE" name="TargetImageDE" width="1" height="1" onLoad="getDEAdHeadCookie(this)"> </body> </html>