Rasheeda Kabba is an American journalist who works as a weekend anchor/reporter for FOX 8. She was the first black news anchor at KLEW and the first KLEW News Live at 11 solo anchor. She has been a guest speaker on CNN Live and Al Jazeera America. She was born on January 4, 1994, in Oklahoma, in the United States of America. Rasheeda started her career as a host and reporter for Routes TV at the University of Oklahoma. She spent four months as an investigative journalist at Routes TV before leaving in December of 2015. She then joined OU Nightly News in 2014, in Norman, Oklahoma. Full Name: Rasheeda Kabba Date of Birth: January 4, 1994 Age: 31 years old (as at 2025) Place of Birth: Oklahoma, USA Education: Rasheeda is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma with a degree in broadcast journalism. Religion: Christianity Weight: 65 kgs Height: 5 feet 8 inches Occupation: Journalist Nationality: American Net-worth: $1 million Relationship: N/A Rasheeda spent two years at OU Nightly News as a reporter and anchor and was also involved in writing and producing news. She joined KOCO 5 News as an intern in January 2016. She edited sports teasers, assisted journalists with story leads, and also worked in news production. In January 2017, Rasheeda joined NTV News as a reporter. This was a few months after leaving KOCO 5 news in May 2016. At NTV News, she covered every story and emerging issues affecting the people of Grand Island, Nebraska. She left NTV News in April 2020 to join her current job at WGHP in the Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point Area. She also worked as a news anchor and reporter for Fox8 News since May 2020, and as at 2025, is a National News Anchor for LocalNewsLive. Social Media: Rasheeda Kabba Facebook: Rasheeda Kabba Twitter: Rasheeda Kabba Instagram: Rasheeda Kabba Awards: Rasheeda Kabba won an Emmy Award for News Serious Feature. This came from her multiple Reports for "Forgotten Souls of North Carolina's Black Cemeteries", when she worked with WGHP Fox 8 from May 2020 to May 2022. She also received a first-place award from the Radio Television Digital News Association of the Carolinas (RTDNAC) for Best Series for the same feature, "Forgotten Souls of North Carolina's Black Cemeteries", for the same period.