Dvdasa - The Complete Archive ◆

Before the Grammy awards, before the "David Choe: High Rider" documentary, and long before the billion-dollar Facebook stock windfall made him a financial legend, there was DVDASA (Double Vaginal Double Anal Sensitive Artist).

Hosted by artist and professional risk-taker David Choe and his co-host, the effortlessly cool adult film star Asa Akira, DVDASA was not just a podcast—it was a cultural phenomenon. It was a chaotic, hilarious, and brutally honest deep dive into the lives of creative misfits, porn stars, gangsters, and artists.

The Complete Archive captures over 300 episodes of unfiltered genius, preserving a moment in internet history where two best friends sat in a garage and talked about everything from high-stakes gambling and sexual proclivities to toxic masculinity and the pursuit of happiness.


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. DVDASA - The Complete Archive

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.

Most fans only remember Episode 1 (Asa finds a hat) to Episode 73 (The final call-in). The complete archive includes the hard-to-find middle episodes (33-50), which represent the show's "golden era." This includes: Before the Grammy awards, before the "David Choe:

In The Complete Archive, listeners will experience the show in its purest form. There are no scripts, no publicists, and no safety nets.


For years, trading DVDASA files was like trading Grateful Dead bootlegs. You had to know a guy who knew a guy with a corrupted hard drive. But over the last three years, a dedicated group of archivists (calling themselves "The Dick Lord Preservation Society") has assembled what is widely considered the DVDASA - The Complete Archive.

Here is what the definitive collection contains (approx. 55 GB): If you were cruising the internet in the

The search term DVDASA - The Complete Archive exists because the show was systematically erased from the mainstream internet. There were three primary reasons:

For nearly six years, episodes existed only on hard drives traded in private Discord servers. No torrents. No streaming. Just ghost links.