that's not what we are doing with our daughter but there's a moment where geraldo rivero goes to a place called willowbrook. i don't think i've seen anything more upsetting and dehumanizing barely any workers, disabled children, less naked covered in their own feces not being allowed to eat. no time to feed them just storehouse. it looked like something that charles dickens could not have imagined and the fact that this existed in the last century and was allowed was shocking to me. >> in pennsylvania there was an institution called pintos and i believe it was in the philadelphia area. it was very equivalent to willowbrook. most of those big institutions are closed, one of the things that you can see happening now is people living in the nursing homes and other congregate living programs, some are quite large. not as large as willowbrook, not in the thousands but 20, 30, 40, 50 people. not only are those programs bad for the individual person come but they're bad for the community because they continue to perpetuate this image that disabled people need to be out of sight out of mind and