When it launched on Netflix in June, KPop Demon Hunters registered 33 million views in just two weeks, and reached the top 10 of the Netflix charts in 93 countries. To star in the first Hollywood animated film set in Korea, with Korean leads, was for Cho "a dream come true" – but it has also made her a powerful role model for Asian-American children, of the kind that she lacked when she was young.
Cho says many Korean-Americans have told her it's "such a refreshing moment", making them proud for the first time of their dual heritage and culture.
"I feel like K-Pop really, truly, has paved the way. K-beauty has had such a big impact on Korea being loved. But I feel like this movie is the one that tipped it over the edge of, everybody wants to go to Korea, now," Cho says.
But the film's success was not guaranteed and Cho says she felt the team making it were "sometimes facing an uphill battle".
"I feel like it kind of sucks to say this, but any time there's an Asian-led project, people feel like it's a risk," she says.
So, when she took on the role, she made an effort to meet everyone working on the film in person, she says.

