For the uninitiated, the acronym stands for — a deliberately absurd and NSFW mantra that perfectly encapsulated the show’s ethos. Hosted by enigmatic street artist David Choe (of "Turn that frown upside down" Facebook mural fame) and adult film actor/director Asa Akira , the show was a raw, uncut dive into sex, crime, art, money, and mental illness. It was described by fans as "the best podcast that ever existed" and by lawyers as "a liability nightmare."
In the golden age of podcasts (circa 2012–2014), before the rise of Joe Rogan’s empire and the sanitized production of Spotify exclusives, there was a beautiful, chaotic, and legally perilous anomaly known as DVDASA . DVDASA - The Complete Archive
The is the digital equivalent of a punk rock 7-inch recorded in a sewer. It’s scratchy, offensive, and glorious. The fact that it survived the great purge of 2014–2015 is a minor miracle of data preservation. For the uninitiated, the acronym stands for —
When the original DVDASA website went dark and the RSS feeds died, the content became "lost media" — elusive, whispered about in Reddit threads and 4chan archives. This article is your definitive guide to : what it was, why it vanished, and how the complete, unexpurgated collection survived against all odds. What Made DVDASA Cult Legendary? To understand why collectors have spent a decade hunting for the DVDASA complete archive , you have to understand the magic of the 80+ episodes produced between 2012 and 2015. The is the digital equivalent of a punk