Aimee Cho is a general assignment reporter for News4.
Cho grew up in Great Falls, Virginia, where she wanted to be a journalist from a young age. She attended Langley High School then Cornell University. Cho wrote for the Cornell Daily Sun and for Ithaca College's student-run TV station.
After being accepted into the prestigious Emma Bowen Foundation Internship Program, Cho spent three summers at NBC4 working in various departments, including the newsroom. At the conclusion of her participation in 2016, NBC4 hired her to be a multimedia journalist.
During her time at NBC4, Cho has won three awards for her work as a multimedia journalist, shooting, writing and editing stories. One was an EMMY from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, and two others were awarded by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters. Cho also earned an EMMY for a profile of a beloved Bethesda football coach with Down syndrome.
Cho is very involved in the Asian American Journalists Association. She currently lives in Chevy Chase.
The Latest
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Families, advocates wary of RFK Jr.'s plan to find cause of autism by September
Autistic people, parents and autism advocates are expressing concerns about Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s announcement that the health agency will uncover what causes autism in a few months. “By September, we will know what has caused the autism epidemic and we’ll be able to eliminate those exposures,” Kennedy told President Donald Trump during a...
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WorldPride organizers caution international trans community about coming to US
The organizers of DC WorldPride may issue a warning to transgender people from other countries about traveling to D.C. for the event as the Trump administration targets the trans community with policies like the military ban on transgender servicemembers and requiring passports to match a person’s sex at birth. “It’s possible that we may actually issue a statement telling...
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‘This is scary': Bullets hit homes, cars during shooting that killed 3 in Spotsylvania
Three people died and three others were taken to hospitals after a shooting in Spotsylvania County, Virginia.
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Mass layoffs begin at HHS as experts worry about future of medical research
Federal health employees stood outside in line for hours Tuesday at the Department of Health and Human Service’s Public Health Division office in Rockville, Maryland, where people waited to scan their badge and learn if they still had a job. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced plans to cut about 10,000 jobs from the agency to save taxpayers money….
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Schools scramble to pay bills after Dept. of Ed. declines to pay COVID relief
School districts around the country are figuring out how to pay some bills after the Department of Education announced it won’t pay out hundreds of millions of dollars in promised COVID-19 relief funds. Congress approved the funding with a deadline of January 2025 to spend it, and the Biden administration allowed states to apply for an extension to January 2026….
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‘Trying to be the best': Reston native Ilia Malinin leads at world championship
Malinin, 20, is the only person in history to land a quadruple axel in competition. He tells News4’s Aimee Cho the first time he landed it, he didn’t even know what to expect.
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Measles case confirmed in DC with exposures on Amtrak, in health clinic
DC Health confirmed a case of measles on Tuesday morning after the person traveled through multiple places, including an Amtrak train.
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Education Department threatens 4 DC-area universities with funding cuts over antisemitism
Four schools in D.C., Maryland and Virginia are on the Trump administration’s list of 60 schools.
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Mom with stage 4 cancer approved for clinical trial after NIH funding cuts left her in limbo
Brooke Kajdy, who lives in Canada, was pregnant with her son when she was diagnosed with stage 4 B-cell lymphoma.
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Washington Informer celebrates 60 years serving Black DC community
The Washington Informer, a Black, woman-owned multimedia newspaper, is celebrating 60 years of service to the Black D.C. area community. The paper’s publisher, Denise Rolark Barnes, carries on the legacy of her father, Calvin W. Rolark, who founded the weekly newspaper in 1964 to highlight positive stories about the local Black community. There are always items on your to-do list…