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Artist David Choe joins Andrew Huberman to share his raw, unfiltered journey from a shame-driven graffiti artist to finding recovery and creative fulfillment. The conversation explores how Choe transformed decades of trauma, addiction, and self-destructive patterns into groundbreaking art and eventual healing. (10:00) Choe discusses his early life of cultural displacement, shame-chasing addiction patterns, and the pivotal moment when he painted the original Facebook offices for equity rather than cash. The discussion reveals how vulnerability, authentic human connection, and the courage to sit with discomfort became the foundation for both artistic brilliance and personal recovery.
David Choe is a world-renowned artist, writer, podcaster, and television host who gained widespread recognition for painting the original Facebook offices and taking equity instead of cash payment. Born and raised in Los Angeles to Korean immigrant parents, Choe has worked across multiple mediums including graffiti, fine art, illustration, and television production. He has hosted shows on FX and worked as a correspondent for Vice News, winning an Emmy for his journalism work. Despite facing numerous personal challenges including addiction and mental health struggles, Choe has emerged as a powerful voice for authentic expression and recovery.
Choe demonstrates that sharing your most shameful experiences authentically can become your greatest strength. (59:00) After experiencing childhood trauma, cultural displacement, and addiction struggles, he learned to channel that pain into honest artistic expression. Rather than hiding his struggles, he discovered that vulnerability—especially about difficult experiences—becomes "the ultimate tool for forgiveness and self-acceptance." This approach transformed his relationship with shame from a destructive force into creative fuel that connects him with others who share similar struggles.
The pressure to meet others' expectations often prevents us from finding our true path. (182:00) Choe shares how disappointing his immigrant parents by pursuing art instead of traditional success actually led to his greatest achievements. "I'm an expert in disappointing my parents," he explains, "You must disappoint your parents." This doesn't mean being deliberately hurtful, but rather having the courage to pursue what calls to you even when it goes against family or societal expectations. The path to authentic success often requires disappointing others' limited vision for your life.
Choe reveals that all addictions are fundamentally about avoiding sitting with yourself and your emotions. (97:30) Whether it's gambling, workaholism, or substance abuse, addiction serves as a way to stay in constant motion to avoid self-reflection. "I can't sit still because that means I have to sit with myself, and I can't do that," he explains. Recovery begins when you develop the capacity to be present with uncomfortable feelings rather than constantly running from them through external stimulation or achievement.
Choe's most productive creative periods happened during times of deprivation rather than abundance. (206:00) "Every time I had a renaissance level creative explosion, there was no WiFi and there was no heater," he reflects. Creative breakthroughs often require removing distractions and sitting with discomfort rather than seeking optimal conditions. This principle applies beyond art—the most meaningful growth often happens when we deliberately limit options and force ourselves to work within constraints.
Daily affirmations of self-worth are essential to counter societal messages of inadequacy. (218:00) Choe describes writing "I am worthy" and "I'm enough" in deodorant on his mirror as daily reminders. He explains that constant exposure to advertising and social media delivers thousands of daily messages that "you're not enough." Deliberately counter-programming this messaging through simple, repeated affirmations helps build genuine self-acceptance. "If I can brainwash myself into believing I'm the best artist in the world, why can't I brainwash myself into thinking I'm a good person?"