Dvdasa - The Complete Archive ((hot)) Today

The magic of DVDASA was the chemistry between its hosts. David Choe, already a legend for his Facebook stock gamble and his murals, was the chaotic nucleus of the show. He was raw, vulnerable, manic, and relentlessly honest. He turned his life into a performance piece, dragging his friends (and enemies) into the spotlight.

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. DVDASA - The Complete Archive

Whether you're looking for the legendary "gambling stories" or the musical genius of Money Mark, the remains a fascinating time capsule of a time when the internet felt a little more like the Wild West. The magic of DVDASA was the chemistry between its hosts

DVDASA wasn't just a podcast; it was an experimental variety show broadcast from "The Choe Store" in Los Angeles. While David Choe and Asa Akira were the anchors, the room was constantly filled with a rotating cast of "vibrators"—sidekicks, musicians, porn stars, and eccentric personalities like Money Mark, Bobby Hundreds, and Critter. The show was famous for: He turned his life into a performance piece,

Asa Akira, by contrast, was the anchor. Her segments are clinically sharp. She deconstructs the economics of sex work while sitting on a sybian. She is the only person in the room who understands consent as a mechanic, not a joke.