Here is the dirty secret of the "complete DVDASA archive." There is no complete archive.
What circulates on Reddit, Soulseek, and encrypted Telegram channels is approximately 85% of the run. You will find Episodes 1–72. You will find the "lost" B-balls (video streams). You will find the unaired pilot.
You will not find Episode 73.
Not the raw file. Not the re-upload. Not a transcript. David Choe’s legal team—which is powerful post-Facebook—has engaged in what media lawyers call "digital extinguishment." They didn't just DMCA it; they buried the search metadata. Search for "DVDASA Episode 73" on Google and you get 404 pages and conspiracy threads.
Rumor has it that the master drive sits in a safety deposit box in the hands of a former producer, with a $500,000 bounty on its head from collectors. Another rumor says Choe himself kept the only copy as a "talisman of shame." DVDASA - The Complete Archive
The peer-to-peer network Soulseek remains the most reliable source. Search "DVDASA" under the "Music" tab (ironically). User "VagDeep" and "SensitiveArchive" have near-complete collections with original release dates preserved.
What is missing from the "Complete" archive?
In the graveyard of internet golden ages, few corpses are as radioactive—or as revered—as DVDASA.
For the uninitiated, the acronym stands for Double Vag, Double Anal, Sensitive Artist. It sounds like a porn category. It was a porn category. But between 2012 and 2015, it was also a weekly live-streamed podcast, an unlicensed therapy session, a performance art hoax, and a reality distortion field hosted by two of the most unstable creative forces of the 21st century: David Choe (the graffiti artist who turned $60,000 of Facebook stock into $200 million) and Asa Akira (the reigning queen of hardcore porn). Here is the dirty secret of the "complete DVDASA archive
To archive DVDASA is not to archive a show. It is to archive a nervous breakdown. It is the Lost Ark of the Covenant of new media—dangerous, sacred, and sealed away by legal fear.
The "Dirty Harry" Era: The early episodes feature the mysterious producer "Dirty Harry," creating a bunker-like atmosphere where the hosts and crew felt safe to share their darkest secrets.
The Gambling Stories: Listeners follow David’s rollercoaster journey through casinos, from losing millions in a single night to the euphoric highs of winning it all back, illustrating the destructive beauty of addiction.
The Romantic Entanglements: The archive documents the weird, pseudo-romantic tension between David and Asa—a relationship that defies labels but remains one of the most compelling friendships in broadcast history. If you were cruising the internet in the
If you were cruising the internet in the early 2010s, you remember the golden age of the long-form podcast. It was the era of The Joe Rogan Experience, WTF with Marc Maron, and The Champs. But nestled in a category all its own was a show that was equal parts art project, therapy session, and stand-up routine: DVDASA.
Standing for Dvdasa Very Difficult Art School Alternative, the show was the brainchild of world-renowned contemporary artist David Choe and adult film star Asa Akira. For a few chaotic, brilliant years, it was the most compelling audio on the internet. And then, almost as quickly as it began, it vanished.
Today, "DVDASA - The Complete Archive" is a holy grail for fans—a fragmented collection of episodes that provides a candid, unfiltered time capsule of a specific subculture in Los Angeles.