[Music]
Friday, October 10th, 10:10. We're
highlighting some of you today, the best
viewers in the world. And we can't wait.
First, we're going to lock in though and
get you your news. Get it? Got it. Good.
Let's go. Huge breaking news yesterday
as Israel and Hamas agreed to a
ceasefire deal. The first phase of a US
brokered ceasefire plan will allow for
the release of all living hostages in
Gaza. 20 remaining hostages are believed
to be alive. Also, Israeli troops will
be withdrawing to an agreed upon line,
which means from most of Gaza, and some
Palestinian prisoners will be released
as well. The deal between Hamas and
Israel was moderated by officials from
Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey. US President
Donald Trump praised them for their
assistance and said the hostages are
likely to be released on Monday. His
announcement did not address some
sticking points in the proposal,
including Hamas disarmament and
governance of Gaza.
>> We ended the war in Gaza and really on a
much bigger basis created peace and I
think it's going to be a lasting peace.
Hopefully an everlasting peace. peace in
the Middle East.
>> Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu will convene his government to
vote on the agreement. The first phase
of the deal can only proceed if the
cabinet votes in favor. And while the
agreement has been met with celebration
in Israel and Gaza, some are concerned a
comprehensive peace deal may still not
materialize.
One woman's prayers of thanks that the
war is ending as phase one of the Gaza
ceasefire plan is agreed.
What sounds like celebratory gunfire is
heard in the distance.
As the sun rises, Gazen residents assess
their new reality.
>> I feel joy, this man says. 2 years of
torment and repression, displacement,
lack of food and water. I'm happy the
war will end. The bleeding we see every
day will end. The nightmares we see.
This 70-year-old woman says, "It's true.
I'm happy in the moment, but now we feel
the pain of our memories. I lost my
daughters, my brother's daughters, and
their children. Most of our family died
and our homes were destroyed."
This man voices concern. He says, "We
have seen ceasefires before that lasted
2 months and then the war returned. It's
true. I am extremely happy, but my joy
is tinged with caution and fear.
Despite the hope of the promised surge
in humanitarian aid,
the harsh reality of Gaza has not
changed. 2 years ago, 12-year-old
Muhammad Abu Amra was in school. He's
now 14, and this is his life in Gaza,
sifting through rotting waste to find
anything that he can sell to help his
family survive.
We collect wood and plastic for fires,
he says. There's nothing else to light a
fire with. Two years ago, before the
war, I didn't even know what a garbage
dump was.
There are 11 people to feed in his
family. He says two of his brothers were
killed by a drone strike after being
displaced from Gaza City.
This is Al-Mawasi in Canyunus, an area
the Israeli military has forced hundreds
of thousands of Gazans to move to over
the course of this war. This is the area
Israel calls a quote humanitarian zone.
Hopes that peace will last this time are
palpable across Gaza, but also tainted
by previous disappointments. A peace
that some in Gaza have never even known.
Paula Hancock's CNN Abu Dhabi.
>> Next, we go to the latest announcement
of this year's Nobel Prizes. Those
annual esteemed awards bestowed upon
those who embody greatness in their
fields. The Nobel Prize in literature
goes to Hungarian novelist Latzlo
Krishna Horai, whose dark and difficult
novels have drawn him praise for being
the quote master of the apocalypse. The
71-year-old was born in Hungary just
before the Hungarian Revolution in the
1950s, which was met by decades of
brutal Soviet repression during the Cold
War.
>> You can say that he's an extension maybe
of the the the European modernist kind
of epic writing that we have seen so
many examples of before, but it takes it
takes takes it to new heights, if you
can put it that.
>> His first novel was published in 1985
before the fall of the Berlin Wall. His
ensuing works have drawn widespread
acclaim for their bleak and visceral
depiction of life in the region.
Pop quiz hot shot. Which soda brand was
originally marketed as a cure for
indigestion? Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, 7Up, or
Coca-Cola.
If you said Pepsi, keep popping. The
name comes from the word pepsin, an
enzyme which aids in food digestion.
However, Pepsi never actually contained
Pepsin. The carbonation in soda, though,
may make you feel temporarily less
bloated.
In California, school lunches across the
state are set to become healthier after
some landmark legislation. Governor
Gavin Nuome signed the Real Food Healthy
Kids Act into law this week. It will
define and ultimately ban ultrarocessed
foods from the 1 billion meals served to
school children across the state each
year. A recent CDC report showed that
kids in the US get nearly 2third of
their calories from ultrarocessed foods
which are packed with additives, high
calorie sugars, salts, and fats. The
California law will require public
health officials and scientists to
identify which of those foods are most
harmful to human health, and they will
be officially phased out of school
lunches by 2035.
In space news, turns out it's pretty
difficult to land on Mars. Two older
landers got knocked out of commission
due to the red planet's so-called dust
devils. But now, scientists are learning
how to avoid them. They looked into data
from two orbiters regarding the planet's
tornadoes, which hurl large amounts of
dust into the Martian atmosphere, and
they realized that the twisters are
stronger and raised more dust than they
previously thought. So, they're hopeful
now that they'll be able to find better
landing spots for probes on future
missions to Mars.
[Applause]
Today's story getting a 10 out of 10.
The thousands of emails, social media
messages, videos, and photos that you
sent us telling us about your 10 out of
10 moments from 2025 so far. You all
brought it. First up, a moment from GHV
Community School District in Garner,
Iowa. Seventh grader Hadley Lin surfed
21 points in a row for her volleyball
team. Her teammates say she's just the
second person in the entire district to
do it. Way to go, Hadley. And from
Washington State, Hatim Omar, shouting
out his sister, Saba, who just learned
to drive in their new city, Mount Lake
Terrace. Keep those hands at 10 and two.
Buckle up. Well done, Sabah. And from
North Miami, Florida, Jacob bowled 11
strikes in a row for his high school.
That's just one shy of a perfect game,
bro. Jacob got a 10 out of 10 out of 10
out of 10 11 times. Well done, sir. So
many of you sent acts of service and
kindness as your 10 out of 10 moments.
Fort Myers, Florida Dayal Academy
holding a field day with local minor
league baseball team, the Mighty
Muscles. They raised over $2,000 for the
best buddies organization, Rise Up. And
Addie John's in Raleigh, North Carolina,
sent us these photos. She received her
bronze award, the highest achievement a
Girl Scout junior can receive. She
collected donations and made care
packages for kids at Duke Children's
Hospital. Addie Salute. Finally, from
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 12-year-old
Elliot Mack holds a lemonade stand every
year to donate money to local
organizations. This summer, he collected
more than $10,000 to be donated. Play
that Friday music. Nadair. This world
needs your positivity, your victories,
and your words of encouragement. Thank
you for letting us share part of you
with the world. You are more powerful
than you know. Now we are off for the
National Holiday Monday. So we'll see
you Tuesday. Have an awesome weekend.
I'm Koi Wire. We are CNN 10. It's been a
blessing to spend this week with you.
Heat.
[Music]
[Music]
Heat.
Heat.
[Music]
Heat.
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
Friday, October 10th, 10:10. We're
highlighting some of you today, the best
viewers in the world. And we can't wait.
First, we're going to lock in though and
get you your news. Get it? Got it. Good.
Let's go. Huge breaking news yesterday
as Israel and Hamas agreed to a
ceasefire deal. The first phase of a US
brokered ceasefire plan will allow for
the release of all living hostages in
Gaza. 20 remaining hostages are believed
to be alive. Also, Israeli troops will
be withdrawing to an agreed upon line,
which means from most of Gaza, and some
Palestinian prisoners will be released
as well. The deal between Hamas and
Israel was moderated by officials from
Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey. US President
Donald Trump praised them for their
assistance and said the hostages are
likely to be released on Monday. His
announcement did not address some
sticking points in the proposal,
including Hamas disarmament and
governance of Gaza.
>> We ended the war in Gaza and really on a
much bigger basis created peace and I
think it's going to be a lasting peace.
Hopefully an everlasting peace. peace in
the Middle East.
>> Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu will convene his government to
vote on the agreement. The first phase
of the deal can only proceed if the
cabinet votes in favor. And while the
agreement has been met with celebration
in Israel and Gaza, some are concerned a
comprehensive peace deal may still not
materialize.
One woman's prayers of thanks that the
war is ending as phase one of the Gaza
ceasefire plan is agreed.
What sounds like celebratory gunfire is
heard in the distance.
As the sun rises, Gazen residents assess
their new reality.
>> I feel joy, this man says. 2 years of
torment and repression, displacement,
lack of food and water. I'm happy the
war will end. The bleeding we see every
day will end. The nightmares we see.
This 70-year-old woman says, "It's true.
I'm happy in the moment, but now we feel
the pain of our memories. I lost my
daughters, my brother's daughters, and
their children. Most of our family died
and our homes were destroyed."
This man voices concern. He says, "We
have seen ceasefires before that lasted
2 months and then the war returned. It's
true. I am extremely happy, but my joy
is tinged with caution and fear.
Despite the hope of the promised surge
in humanitarian aid,
the harsh reality of Gaza has not
changed. 2 years ago, 12-year-old
Muhammad Abu Amra was in school. He's
now 14, and this is his life in Gaza,
sifting through rotting waste to find
anything that he can sell to help his
family survive.
We collect wood and plastic for fires,
he says. There's nothing else to light a
fire with. Two years ago, before the
war, I didn't even know what a garbage
dump was.
There are 11 people to feed in his
family. He says two of his brothers were
killed by a drone strike after being
displaced from Gaza City.
This is Al-Mawasi in Canyunus, an area
the Israeli military has forced hundreds
of thousands of Gazans to move to over
the course of this war. This is the area
Israel calls a quote humanitarian zone.
Hopes that peace will last this time are
palpable across Gaza, but also tainted
by previous disappointments. A peace
that some in Gaza have never even known.
Paula Hancock's CNN Abu Dhabi.
>> Next, we go to the latest announcement
of this year's Nobel Prizes. Those
annual esteemed awards bestowed upon
those who embody greatness in their
fields. The Nobel Prize in literature
goes to Hungarian novelist Latzlo
Krishna Horai, whose dark and difficult
novels have drawn him praise for being
the quote master of the apocalypse. The
71-year-old was born in Hungary just
before the Hungarian Revolution in the
1950s, which was met by decades of
brutal Soviet repression during the Cold
War.
>> You can say that he's an extension maybe
of the the the European modernist kind
of epic writing that we have seen so
many examples of before, but it takes it
takes takes it to new heights, if you
can put it that.
>> His first novel was published in 1985
before the fall of the Berlin Wall. His
ensuing works have drawn widespread
acclaim for their bleak and visceral
depiction of life in the region.
Pop quiz hot shot. Which soda brand was
originally marketed as a cure for
indigestion? Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, 7Up, or
Coca-Cola.
If you said Pepsi, keep popping. The
name comes from the word pepsin, an
enzyme which aids in food digestion.
However, Pepsi never actually contained
Pepsin. The carbonation in soda, though,
may make you feel temporarily less
bloated.
In California, school lunches across the
state are set to become healthier after
some landmark legislation. Governor
Gavin Nuome signed the Real Food Healthy
Kids Act into law this week. It will
define and ultimately ban ultrarocessed
foods from the 1 billion meals served to
school children across the state each
year. A recent CDC report showed that
kids in the US get nearly 2third of
their calories from ultrarocessed foods
which are packed with additives, high
calorie sugars, salts, and fats. The
California law will require public
health officials and scientists to
identify which of those foods are most
harmful to human health, and they will
be officially phased out of school
lunches by 2035.
In space news, turns out it's pretty
difficult to land on Mars. Two older
landers got knocked out of commission
due to the red planet's so-called dust
devils. But now, scientists are learning
how to avoid them. They looked into data
from two orbiters regarding the planet's
tornadoes, which hurl large amounts of
dust into the Martian atmosphere, and
they realized that the twisters are
stronger and raised more dust than they
previously thought. So, they're hopeful
now that they'll be able to find better
landing spots for probes on future
missions to Mars.
[Applause]
Today's story getting a 10 out of 10.
The thousands of emails, social media
messages, videos, and photos that you
sent us telling us about your 10 out of
10 moments from 2025 so far. You all
brought it. First up, a moment from GHV
Community School District in Garner,
Iowa. Seventh grader Hadley Lin surfed
21 points in a row for her volleyball
team. Her teammates say she's just the
second person in the entire district to
do it. Way to go, Hadley. And from
Washington State, Hatim Omar, shouting
out his sister, Saba, who just learned
to drive in their new city, Mount Lake
Terrace. Keep those hands at 10 and two.
Buckle up. Well done, Sabah. And from
North Miami, Florida, Jacob bowled 11
strikes in a row for his high school.
That's just one shy of a perfect game,
bro. Jacob got a 10 out of 10 out of 10
out of 10 11 times. Well done, sir. So
many of you sent acts of service and
kindness as your 10 out of 10 moments.
Fort Myers, Florida Dayal Academy
holding a field day with local minor
league baseball team, the Mighty
Muscles. They raised over $2,000 for the
best buddies organization, Rise Up. And
Addie John's in Raleigh, North Carolina,
sent us these photos. She received her
bronze award, the highest achievement a
Girl Scout junior can receive. She
collected donations and made care
packages for kids at Duke Children's
Hospital. Addie Salute. Finally, from
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 12-year-old
Elliot Mack holds a lemonade stand every
year to donate money to local
organizations. This summer, he collected
more than $10,000 to be donated. Play
that Friday music. Nadair. This world
needs your positivity, your victories,
and your words of encouragement. Thank
you for letting us share part of you
with the world. You are more powerful
than you know. Now we are off for the
National Holiday Monday. So we'll see
you Tuesday. Have an awesome weekend.
I'm Koi Wire. We are CNN 10. It's been a
blessing to spend this week with you.
Heat.
[Music]
[Music]
Heat.
Heat.
[Music]
Heat.
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]