Dvdasa - The Complete Archive

For fans of the "Choe-verse," the archive is considered essential for understanding the career trajectories of its participants. Some fans even rank early episodes as some of the best podcasting ever recorded, citing the unique "mania" driven by Choe. Controversies and Removal

High-quality rips of the original theme songs, live band segments, and promotional art. Where to Find the Archive Today

: Already legendary for choosing Facebook stock over cash for painting their first headquarters—a move that netted him hundreds of millions of dollars—Choe was a billionaire rogue artist. He brought immense wealth, erratic genius, raw emotional trauma, and total disregard for corporate consequences. DVDASA - The Complete 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.

Independent archivists have uploaded various torrent links and direct-download collections of the audio files. These collections are frequently taken down and re-uploaded. For fans of the "Choe-verse," the archive is

The first two episodes featured comedian Yoshi Obayashi, but Choe quickly pivoted to bringing in a high-octane mix of "legitimate" celebrities and fringe degenerates. Despite the notoriously adult nature of the content, Choe managed to lure surprising talent into the lair. His plan? "Asa has offered to blow anyone who comes on," he famously joked, in the dry, deadpan tone that made it impossible to tell if he was kidding.

: The most infamous segment occurred in March 2014, where Choe described a nonconsensual sexual encounter with a masseuse. Choe later claimed the story was fictionalized for the show, but it remains the primary driver behind the archive's removal. Where to Find the Archive Today : Already

has arrived. All 96 episodes. All the untrimmed phone calls. All the fights. All the laughter. For the first time in nearly a decade, the lost library of DVDASA has been unearthed, remastered, and released without corporate apologies or missing segments.

Rumors exploded. Was Choe threatened? Was it a performance art piece? A breakdown? The official explanation was always the same: “We took it down because we wanted to.” But the damage was done. The complete, uncut run of DVDASA had become the Holy Grail of lost podcasts—discussed in Reddit threads, traded on encrypted hard drives, always incomplete.

The show featured live musical improvisations, featuring talent like Money Mark (Beastie Boys collaborator) and various underground artists.

The episode aired live. Within 12 hours, the internet exploded. The Daily Mail picked it up. Anonymous death threats to the sponsors (including Vitamin Water and Adidas) flooded in. Choe went into hiding. The show was deleted.