I had a friend who was involuntarily committed, he was accused of a violent crime he did not commit, spent three years in a full blown psych ward, after DNA evidence proved him innocent he was released into his grandfather's care, his grandfather was the nicest man you'd ever meet, and I remember him saying, they took the boy out of his body and put it in a specimen jar, he looked after my friend for seven years and when he passed away my friend basically reverted to hospital life, he lived in his room with the door closed and became very violent if anybody tried to open his door or asked him to come out, it was truly fucking gut wrenching and very disturbing to see how someone can be altered that way, he passed away in 2019 from health complications, and I still think of him often, very much miss that man, only wish he could have gotten more help.
@pamelasimone50845 ай бұрын
That is so sad.
@gylldevlin84784 ай бұрын
So many cases like that its shocking!
@ssw4m4 ай бұрын
Mental health treatment with long-term anti-psychotics can be very harmful, it's really not a good approach in my opinion.
@lisajayneboulton51504 ай бұрын
wow im sorry i feel pain for your story, big love xx
@scottnorris-tr8uq4 ай бұрын
I've been in a few mental hospitals, I must admit that it saved me from myself, I really needed help, being suicidal and addicted to drugs, was also a kleptomaniac.
@itsicearmour Жыл бұрын
Great video! I've been in psych wards on multiple occasions as a teen and an adult and one thing that never seemed to change is that almost none of the staff will actually listen to you so seeing that moment caught on camera was pretty crazy.
@XANAX-Pilled Жыл бұрын
As have i, and it DOES suck. On the OTHER hand, at least in the 90s they'd ATTEMPT to treat you for a couple weeks (without an icepick), but they cut funding so much in Texas that you've pretty well got to BEG to stay longer than overnight, and even then, you're out of there within 72 hours. You'll finally get treated in JAIL, when you DO something crazy. They refuse to treat us, and then warehouse us.
@WK-47 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, there's a well-documented bias in these settings that leads to even mentally healthy people who seem sound of mind being labelled as lying or delusional, because the staff assume there must be something wrong with them. I can't remember the name, but an American psychologist ran an experiment in which he sent test subjects to a mental hospital to fake illness and then tell the staff they felt better. He didn't tell the hospital he'd done this, and the majority of subjects were institutionalized and kept that way even after reporting feeling better. When he later told the hospital about it and that he was going to send more fakers, but actually didn't, they still institutionalized the same rate of people. Point being, even professionals misdiagnose at an astounding rate. This isn't to call out people in the field, most of whom are honest and want the best for their patients, but it shows that they unfortunately do make mistakes that can have terrible consequences.
@TJR-ju8dj10 ай бұрын
@@WK-47 yup.. i was sent to one for 3 days..prolonged to 9. i said i was fine and they kept me there..i just needed a cpap machine and more sleep basically.
@litty45535 ай бұрын
I trust no one blindly, some of these dr are completely useless
@sr-kt9ml Жыл бұрын
You forgot to mention that when Jim was being shaved they intentionally cut his face with a razor quite badly. It is excruciating to watch. That guard is pure evil
@irishcajun85 Жыл бұрын
I wondered why he looked like he was bleeding, and why he was covering his face. Can you imagine being marched out to be shaved by another human with the constant fear that they will intentionally cut you with a razor? Jfc
@WobblesandBean Жыл бұрын
This is why I'm a misanthrope. Human beings are just, well, evil. There's no other word for it. For the 15% of people who are sadistic and cruel to helpless beings, human or otherwise, 99% of the remaining population is completely apathetic towards it.
@prsee5969 Жыл бұрын
Whoa…
@karinababy6557 Жыл бұрын
Humans can be so cruel to each other
@mccabessupplementsandgym3913 Жыл бұрын
Sick
@bufferkiller6 ай бұрын
The most horrifying thing about this is that this is how they're acting while knowingly being filmed. I don't think I want to know what happened when the cameras were gone.
@JGB_Wentworth5 ай бұрын
*filumed
@PsychesMuse5 ай бұрын
@@JGB_Wentworth yep! "fill uh, ming" is how "he"(she/he/they/bots) are "pronouncing"("MISS"pronouncing! )... "filming"/Filming... and F I L M as... fill 'em.
@CarmelDeery-qc9lv5 ай бұрын
Me neither. 😮
@karenroot4505 ай бұрын
@@JGB_Wentworth. Hello. That irritated the hell out of me!
@pamelasimone50845 ай бұрын
I know what you mean. I’m sure the patients don’t seem aware. That awful that they wouldn’t even give them hospital gowns.
@agnesblack1974 Жыл бұрын
This is what I remember. My biological mother was institutionalized between 1977-1983 more on than off. My adoptive mom, her sister, would take me to visit her when I was 4-5 years old until I went to my adoptive dad and told him the stuff I was seeing. That stopped really fast. But what I remember was horrifying. She had ECT many times. We would visit her after a session and my biological mom wouldn't recognize me and it was just messed up.
@bryannicholls200 Жыл бұрын
If you don't mind me asking could you tell me what ECT is please. If it is too painful too talk about then just ignore my question and accept my apologies for the intrusion.
@shanelandis7193 Жыл бұрын
@@bryannicholls200I'm not the op but it's electric convulsive therepy. The electrocute you into a seizure, which is supposed to calm your demeanor overall. It's still sometimes used today for drug resistant depression but sedatives are used and the patient consents. Back in the day there were no sedatives and no consent
@The_Tiffster Жыл бұрын
Do you mean that they stopped the visits after you confided in them, or that the abuse stopped at that time? I'm so sorry you went through that and my heart aches for your mom💔 Those facilities did more harm than good - if they did any good at all!!!
@bryannicholls200 Жыл бұрын
@@shanelandis7193 Thank you for explaining this to me i appreciate it. To the OP once again i apologise for my question and if it brought up any uncomfortable memories from your past.
@MissVonDerBishh Жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry that you experienced such traumatic events as a child. Your aunt probably thought she was doing a good thing by letting you see your real mom. I’m glad your uncle stopped the visits. Back then, hospitals were ignorant and abusive, kind of like today. These places still run the same way. I hope you have made some peace with the trauma and can have happiness in your life. Thank you for sharing, I know that’s hard to do with something so personal. ❤
@cremetangerine82 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering this documentary. I worked for the Massachusetts Department of Correction and my supervisor wanted us (the research staff) to watch the documentary. Bridgewater State Hospital continues to have civil rights issues and still needs urgent reform. I'm glad to see a great synopsis of this documentary and I appreciate Fred Wiseman for recording this for prosperity.
@MomMom4Cubs11 ай бұрын
*posterity
@kevinfoster1138 Жыл бұрын
At around 10:25 the man arguing with the doctor sounds more competent than the doctor. Of course you can't diagnose a person from just a few sentences but it's still disappointing that nobody really listens to him.
@colours01 Жыл бұрын
Was that that generations version of covaids? Where folks were forced according to medical “professionals”. Things that make u go hmmmm
@SarahSkinnyJeans Жыл бұрын
Totally
@ulose5909 Жыл бұрын
People shouldn’t be diagnosing other people at all IMO. Let alone with a sentence
@TravellerZasha7 ай бұрын
When I was a teen I went to a Psych ward after lashing out and was diagnosed with schizophrena which now as an adult was a misdiagnosis.
@StrAnGErous4205 ай бұрын
@@TravellerZasha .....or was it?
@maxiesky9594 Жыл бұрын
This movie was shown to us in nursing school in our Psychology class. I hatted it then and still do. The staff was so cruel to the patients. I could never get this movie out of my head.
@StrAnGErous4205 ай бұрын
Interesting. What was the aim in showing you this? From a psychological standpoint it seems an odd choice to show a doc that focuses on the inhumane living conditions in a disreputable facility. There are plenty of docs that adequately show the effects of mental illness.
@atlebakke5 ай бұрын
@@StrAnGErous420"Odd choice? What could be the aim?" It's one of the all-time great documentaries! Not just regarding mental health, but regarding all subjects. Maybe they showed it so the students could see the history of how awful the mentally ill have been treated, for centuries. Or how *NOT* to treat patients when she would eventually start work as a nurse! It's a one of a kind film, these institutions never allowed film crews inside, besides most film people weren't interested in these subjects in the first place. We're lucky this movie was ever made! And at least in my psychology class this was only one of a dozen docs we were showed, it's obviously possible to see more than *one* movie over the course of months/a school year. We also saw Cuckoo's Nest, but I don't wanna go into and explain the reason for that as well lol! You ask what the aim could be of showing it, the question should be what would be the aim of *not* showing it? Honestly all the different (good) reasons to show it is almost limitless! I don't want to offend, but your comment really made me sigh with its ridiculousness..
@StrAnGErous4205 ай бұрын
@atlebakke ignorant, meaning I don't have the knowledge regarding the subject about which I'm asking, which, issss, the point of asking? Being that I'm not a psych major? Don't be an asshole. Besides I wasn't asking you. Your psychology class didn't do much to teach you how to interact with people. Have a good one.
@litty45535 ай бұрын
Nothing changed today! They just cover things up better
@ATXviIIIe4 ай бұрын
@@litty4553 Of course things have changed. How can you claim that these institutions are not changed? So you have any info or just looking to create doubt?
@panqueque445 Жыл бұрын
As horrendous as this hospital was, the smoking was normal back then. Believe it or not, you could freely smoke inside hospitals. Doctors, nurses, patients. There were even ashtrays on the hallways. It sounds weird now, but back then no one thought anything of it.
@poindextertunes Жыл бұрын
Airplanes too
@butcheredalive Жыл бұрын
@@poindextertunespretty much anywhere. Clothing stores, restaurants, even high schools had smoking areas for students
@pianissimo369 Жыл бұрын
My teachers used to smoke in class too 🤷
@SubjectDelta20 Жыл бұрын
There were some magazines and medical journals that actually said smoking was good you, both in mind and body. They encouraged it heavily, "You're not a real man unless you smoke Marlboro. And if you REALLY cared about your fellow man, you'll blow that smoke into every baby's face you see, to help them grow into strong, resilient individuals."
@BirdieBraniel Жыл бұрын
I remember my doctor blowing her cigarette ash from her prescription pad before writing out my asthma medication, that's was mid 70's.
@user-qb8qm4mp5n7 ай бұрын
"Mistreatment persists at Bridgewater State Hospital, report says," WBUR, March 13, 2024: "...The report, from the Disability Law Center, found patients at Bridgewater State Hospital were subjected to illegally forced medication injections, violence from staff, lack of medical care, inappropriate medication for opioid use disorder and mold contamination...." Department of State Hospital Patton in San Bernardino, California has been accused by former patients of getting unwanted "booty shots." Visitors say it's more of a prison than a hospital. I was in film school during the 80s in Boston and not one of my professors / teachers talked about Frederick Wiseman's banned film. I recall learning about formerly banned books in Boston, but not about "Titicut Follies." I just now stumbled across this brilliant documentary filmmaker. "Titicut Follies" is like watching a Federico Fellini film, but in English. The warden is a Broadway star. I say warden because Bridgewater is a soft-power prison, as most likely all state hospitals are. The consensus is soft power is better than hard power, but not necessarily. Soft power is more insidious than hard power because with hard power the rules and limits are clearly defined. Vladimir told them he had more of a chance of getting better if he were back in prison than staying at Bridgewater. Vladimir challenged the irrelevant questions he was asked, such as how many times do you go to the bathroom. The authority figures of course were shaken by Vladimir's obvious logic. What was their final answer? Give him more medication. This is what is happening today, folks. Nothing much has changed in 60 years, other than "nuclear shelter this way" signs have been replaced with "No smoking allowed." I like your serious treatment of the film. Many reviews I've seen treat the film as some kind of joke. It isn't.
@Nonayabizness360 Жыл бұрын
My great uncle went to one of these types of places, to Eloise Asylum in Detroit. It had its own zip code when it first opened and it had everything from a butcher shop to it’s own black smithing shop. He went for a “ mental break “ but he got out about a year later. There were also places in our country called ( poor houses ) and my grandmother was terrified of going to one. She talked about them a lot in her life and people were treated horribly in these places, it’s a part of our history that has been covered up and forgotten about. My great grandmother also had tuberculosis and my grandmother and her family hid her in an attic room so they could care for her until her death because they were carted off to these asylums when they found out you had TB to die. They were hell holes where a lot of people were experimented on. The medical community did some evil things to people, the lobotomy was absolutely evil and was done regularly in these asylums. Btw just subscribed.
@andrewyoung2796 Жыл бұрын
Eloise named after a postmasters daughter Started out glorious.
@ange1098 Жыл бұрын
Rockefeller has a lot to answer, for crimes against humanity.
@andreana_s_7685 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewyoung2796 Actually, it started out as a poorhouse & a farm 2 miles from the city limits and in very poor condition. It operated from 1839 to early 1982 (!!!) only eventually developing into an asylum, sanatorium and hospital. In 1832 it was called the Wayne County Poorhouse; it was in very poor condition when it was purchased 2 years later in 1834 as part of a 280 acres land sale, which included the poorhouse & the black horse inn, which was a pit stop between Detroit and Chicago. By 1872 it was still called 'the Wayne County Alms House'; by 1886 it was just 'the Wayne County House', and the name 'Eloise' doesn't really appear until the early 1900's: by 1913 there were three divisions with that namesake - The Eloise Hospital (the Mental Hospital), the Eloise Infirmary (the Poorhouse) and the Eloise Sanatorium (the T.B. Hospital) , collectively all just refferred to as 'the Eloise'. It isn't easy to find information, to be fair, but for only a small period of time did it ever hold any hope whatsoever - what you describe as "started out glorious" is certainly not how it actually began, and even if you refer only to the 1913 era, "glorious" still wouldn't be a description anybody would use by todays standards. Even back then I believe it was largely an illusion for the public, as conditions inside have always been brutal. During the time around the turn of the century when it was becoming largely self sufficient, with a working farm, its own police and fire departments, a railroad and trolley system, a bakery, amusement hall, laundry facility, post office and a power plant (this is the period of time I believe you refer to when you say it "started out glorious"...) even then many patients (inmates) refused to go to what they called "the wilderness", And the staff were exploiting the poor inmates since day one, I'm afraid, housing themselves in the old black horse tavern & housing patients/inmates in metal A-frames! Glorious indeed...
@jooosAREevil8 ай бұрын
Off to the poor house is a literal saying … I didn’t know it had real meaning 😂
@Naamturd1016 ай бұрын
Like modern day leper colony's.
@Xanrax Жыл бұрын
I hated seeing the scene with Jim being tormented like that. You can tell that he goes through that same thing everyday. At the end of the segment when they bring Jim back to his empty room and Jim starts slapping his feet on the cement floor in a rhythmic way that is a testament to the time he spends alone in the room.
@kuramayoko23 Жыл бұрын
You HAVE to give Deburke321 A LOT of credit! He doesn't upload frequently, but when he does, the content is in a class of its own!
@deburke321 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@XANAX-Pilled Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Wish he'd upload more, but I'm sure these 20+ minute documentaries take time.
@shermsmoke Жыл бұрын
Dat boy Deburke been wit da bidnezz!
@bodhi_satfa Жыл бұрын
Agreed, DB, thx for exposing this one.
@johnnysays9629 Жыл бұрын
Hes great, I wish he got more subscribers and views. Definitely one of the best creators.
@mci6830 Жыл бұрын
Powerful stuff. One of the most disturbing individuals in that film was the main superintendent. He looked manic. Closely followed by the smoking doctor. The blinking gives it away. Those poor souls.
@barneyronnie Жыл бұрын
You must mean Dr. Praetorius who was from the Carpathian mountains in eastern Romania. He knew a lot about psychiatry, and he gave several lectures when I attended University of Massachusetts, Chan Medical School in Worcester. Fortunately, several of us ended up having lunch with him; he was a psychiatric genius, but had TOO MANY patients. He didn't promote lobotomies or excessive neuroleptics. I know nothing about the 'Superintendent' as well as the American psychiatrist. They appeared to be malignant, narcissistic maniacs! I retired from psychiatry 5 years ago. Reinhold Von Treffencaunbowz, MBBS, MD, PhD
@fuctshytup5 ай бұрын
that superintendent seemed like the most insane out of everyone shown in this documentary
@kimpicot9000 Жыл бұрын
I Remember visiting an Uncle In The Hospital. Back then it was called "Manic Depression" (Bi-Polar) And it was just cold and really eerie in there. It scared me so much, I may have been maybe 8 or 9. He then was stuck in a Unit until his death. He was that drugged up there was NO way he could be released and live a normal life, he lived there for decades until He passed not so long ago. Little did I know when I went to visit him that I would end up at the same hospital 9 years later. ThankFully alot changed since the 80's when I was put in there in the 90's. I also have Bi-Polar and yes I do still have to be admitted occasionally but I get to leave. I have another Uncle and Aunt plus 3 cousin's who also have Bi-Polar. I remember visiting him after my diagnosis and he was stunned that I was out and about. He still thought if you have Bi-Polar your locked away for life. My Aunt was forced to have Electric Shock Therapy many times. NO it did not help her. 🤘🏽🖤
@WK-47 Жыл бұрын
It's a travesty that electroshock therapy (among other things) has such a history of misuse that led to the popular misconceptions about it, because it does work in certain cases - not all, but some, and these things should never be used without patient consent except in legitimate emergencies. I also have mental disorders, and as many problems as there are in society today, I'm grateful that people like us are treated much better by both the medical profession and wider society than we were just a few decades ago. Anyway, sorry to hear about your uncle, but I'm glad to hear you've had a better time of things. Just going off your comment, you seem pretty stable. Take care.
@carynmartin6053 Жыл бұрын
My aunt had electroshock therapy also but in the state mental hospital in Vermont called Waterbury. She actually was helped by it. My ex was in Bridgewater in MA when it was also used as a jail for the mentally ill, temporary or otherwise. It was in the 80's. He didn't say much about it but I'm sure it was no picnic. There's also a mental hospital still operating today in Brattleboro Vermont called The Retreat that has horror stories attached to its history, but today it's more of a dual diagnosis treatment hospital for addicts with mental illnesses
@cameraop8210 Жыл бұрын
yes, it is still used occasionally, the only difference is someone can't be compelled to have it. They must voluntarily have it. Here, it is indicated for major depressive disorder symptoms only E.g. the depression is so bad that the person won't get out of bed or even eat. Many people report it works. A psychiatrist told me it basically does the same thing Sertraline does but much faster (how much truth is in that I don't know). One adverse effect from it though is memory loss but if your only memories are going to be laying in bed and not eating one may rationalize it is worth the memory loss@@WK-47
@platosghost6916 Жыл бұрын
"Omg the doctor is smoking!" I dunno if y'all knew this, but back then, everyone was smoking, everywhere, all the time.
@haddenindustries29225 ай бұрын
It was promoted by doctors, there were ads of doctors smoking and promoting Camel cigarettes.
@HippieInHeart5 ай бұрын
True lmao. Smoking just didn't really have any stigma back then, it's a more recent thing.
@johndoen.h.49665 ай бұрын
My dentist would smoke while cleaning my teeth.
@WilmaFistdu655 ай бұрын
Used to be ashtrays beside hospital beds
@kristin_eros5 ай бұрын
@@haddenindustries2922😮
@Dunny69rBwfc Жыл бұрын
I bet you a pound to a penny that this inhuman bullshit is still happening today guaranteed. Damn good show my man,keep up the good work & stay blessed from all in the UK.
@6Haunted-Days Жыл бұрын
How? Where? We don’t even have this crappy level of care…..NOW. We have no institutions…..they are now JAILS that do all this…..
@MsDelola Жыл бұрын
wrking in the profesion,what I saw and know personally, u would have night terrors.Its sad how some of r society treats fellow human beings.
@dennisdmenace6249 Жыл бұрын
@@6Haunted-DaysThis "Bridgewater Institution for The Criminally Insane" is ABSOLUTELY still open.
@ryanbhadain5867 Жыл бұрын
It happens to this day in mental institutions in African countries. I am from Mauritius and things worse than what is shown in the documentary happens there. NURSES (not guards) regularly beat patients there and once a young woman patient was raped by the staff. Sometimes people are chained. The worse is that this place I am talking about is not an institution for prisoners and the criminally insane, but a normal hospital for people who have nothing to do with the law or convictions. Next to it they have a division for the criminally insane and no one knows what goes on there.
@joesmith6366 Жыл бұрын
dam riht it is
@ren_theHEN Жыл бұрын
And folks wonder why I am blown away when they say things like, “I trust the government” or “they wouldn’t intentionally poison us” or “they care about the citizens”.
@jumpingman6612 Жыл бұрын
Yes, you only have to look at recent events like covid. Just wow
@nativeamericanfeather9948 Жыл бұрын
Government is enemy #1 they are like parasites..living off of US. They keep us controlled because they need us..we don't need them. When we all wake up & realize that..them we will be truly free. Until then. We work our life away to make them rich and us stay poor
@davidsmith5523 Жыл бұрын
Same with big business of course.
@ominous-omnipresent-they7 ай бұрын
Wait, what?
@ominous-omnipresent-they7 ай бұрын
@@jumpingman6612 What the hell are you even talking about?
@prsee5969 Жыл бұрын
This was absolutely shocking and sick. Reminds me when I was 13 (I was abused by teachers, it left a mark, I was a little anti authority for good reason) this psychiatrist that I call Hannibal lector threw me in a loonie bin and told me if I don’t behave I’ll stay, he has full control of me. I’m a paranoid schizophrenic(yea he could diagnose schizophrenia at the ripe age of 13), nobody would believe me, only he could sign me out the hospital. That’s almost verbatim of what he told me, and mind you I was 13…. I’m almost 40 and I am terrified of doctors ever since.
@RizzyDaGoat Жыл бұрын
dude its absolutely sick how people will treat someone if they have a physical or mental disability, acting as if people with disabilities ARENT people?? they are born with these disorders they cant do anything to change that like really what is wrong with you?
@MightyoNe-MiT1 Жыл бұрын
@@RizzyDaGoat No you dont get it. They ARE THE MENTAL ONES!!!
@FunkyTomo Жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear you were treated like that and suffered all that abuse..... I hope you on some peace in your life now xxx
@thepunisher3640 Жыл бұрын
Yeh you can diagnose schizophrenia at 13.
@davidarundel6187 Жыл бұрын
The Dr , I suspect abused his position and training , with you . From your description of him , he had narcassistic & sadistic tendency's , and should not have been allowed to practice . Much like you , I do not like some Drs , who drop their facades and show their true selves - these ones , get push back and one is inviting legal action . Allopathic medicine , for myself , isn't the greatest thing out , so I've learned about Naturopathy and Iridology , along with Homeopathy and the like , and use these practices in preference to Allopathic Remedy's where possible . Holistic medicine , which covers the practices named , work well, as do the newer Flower Essences . I've not had side effects from any of them , ND have surprised medical doctors several times , by adjusting certain numbers down , which they expected to keep going up . I Trust your health , improves more than it is at present , and you are able to figure out the right way for you to fix it - "ask , and you will receive" .
@judyisapunk79286 ай бұрын
I grew up in Peabody, MA and Jim was a frequent fixture in our city in the 1980’s/1990’s. He would walk the streets and talk to himself. My father was extremely nice to him and would always talk with him so I clearly remember him as a small child. He had a very unique look and was very tall. I found him to be kind and pleasant. Poor Jim never had a chance.
@blu4085 Жыл бұрын
I used to work in one of these kind of institutions (or what to call them?) 40 yrs ago in Finland. What went on, up this modern era (beginning of the 80's ) inside those walls was disturbing to a point sometimes where it was truly difficult to separate sometimes (a lot of the time) who the sane were from the insane. The head Psychiatrist turned up maybe once a month for a day or two, and she was like directly out of some movie like The hunger games. ( Could have been easily written in to that script as Snow's wife or something) It was SUCH bizarre place to work, and it was my first real job, starting at 18 yrs old. The experience of that place has left its mark on me for life.
@janiceteeter6091 Жыл бұрын
I saw this movie in 1969 when I was in graduate school for social work and serving a 9 month internship at a very large ,very old state hospital. We students and staff were all shocked at what we saw. Our institution had modern therapy techniques and a history of changing and improving over time. Patients are usually treated with respect and listened to. Improvement had Patients released to the community. As students, the film seemed to represent how mental health institutions functioned in the past, decades ago. And to show us how the system could be abused and how mental health was scary to the public, so enough money was rarely provided for the life style and treatment that ill people needed.
@saarapollonen8138 Жыл бұрын
@blu4085 Oh interesting, as a Finn who works in the field today I would like to know more if you tell what you saw 40 years ago?
@MsDelola Жыл бұрын
I can relate
@koukutus3272 Жыл бұрын
I was put in Hyvinkää psych ward 4 years ago with completely restricted from outer world. Couldnt even go out for a cigarette. Just a ventilated box. I didnt experience physical violence, but the nurses were horrible. They didnt take anything i told serious and had a funny look when i spoke. Once i slept through food time and they gave me nothing because "my fault". Also i asked if my dad could bring me vitamines, smokes, candy etc and i got laughed at. I dont wish that to anybody
@saarapollonen8138 Жыл бұрын
@@koukutus3272 Baphomet is no good man, no wonder demons are torturing you
@Volvex696 Жыл бұрын
The superintendent seems like the most sick individual to me😮
@poindextertunes Жыл бұрын
Clearly the sickest ppl in this hospital are the staff 😒
@oneidawolf7765 ай бұрын
Not a lot has changed, especially in the mental health section. As someone who worked in a hospital for a while, I've heard the nurses and psw's say some pretty terrible things about people in their care when they think no one is around to hear them.
@josuea.v.42325 ай бұрын
In ANY hospital even regular ones.
@Tridentwolf3 ай бұрын
The sickest people in society are also the government. The world is run by evil people. At times I wonder who really won.. god or satan
@MikaMitenaLives5 ай бұрын
The Even Scarier part - This IS Exactly What is happening in regular Hospitals & “Rehabilitation”facilities ALL Over USA! I’ve witnessed it with my own eyes 🤬
@TheExigency4 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying this. I can't tell if people genuinely don't know that people suffering from mental health issues are still demonized and mistreated or if they don't care. Everyone acts like this was in the past.
@Mike-es2yg4 ай бұрын
Nursing homes too
@anginpslfl20054 ай бұрын
Me too! It is herendous and when you report it it gets swept under the rug. It is heart breaking
@Matti_Sisu4 ай бұрын
The keywords being ITS HAPPENING NOW
@OscarInhibited4 ай бұрын
The most cowardly form of whistleblowing is an unsupported claim. Hope you got the attention you wanted. Go get help.
@ShortbusMooner Жыл бұрын
Very timely post- I've been considering the beyond urgent need for mental hospitals at this point in history. However- places like this are the exact reason that asylums have fell into disfavor. Thanks for sharing!
@backwardsbandit8094 Жыл бұрын
Care homes and psychiatric facilities are well worth it as long as they're properly funded, the stays are fairly short term and the care is of a very high standard. They should be conducted with frequent and heavy oversight. I've been to a good one before for a short period of time and it saved my life. I've also been to a bad one, albeit nowhere near as bad as this. They're almost two completely institutions
@jamesross9724 Жыл бұрын
ive been to Broughton state hospital i saw a list of things used to be imprisened anyhow self abuse,Onanism could damn sure land you there,
@robinmcinarnay7827 Жыл бұрын
Yes, after learning big pharma was the main proponent in shutting these down it makes me highly suspicious of their true motives.
@user-ez7ls2du9c Жыл бұрын
I agree, the world needs mental illness hospitals and asylums more than ever before in history, with so much mentall illness all around us and movies and news and schools pushing it on us and our children, the world is one big asylum it seems.
@TheDevouredEagle Жыл бұрын
This video essay is as fascinating as the Documental itself 👏 it's always heartbreaking hearing about so called "Mental Care Facilities" when the people it used to "treat" are probably now homeless and addicted to substances on the many streets of the Country, still forgotten by society and with no hope of receiving help, or a chance of a better and dignified life 😢
@Foxiz Жыл бұрын
Great video, much needed! Psych wards still are horrible places without any regard to how the inmates feel or what they need, I have seen this with my own eyes, and in some capacity experienced it too. Especially the cutting off patients, not listening or even caring about people who are clearly in need of urgent help. (I was admitted because of Delirium from alcoholism and got out within a week, but it felt like "One Flew Over The Cuccoos Nest" for most of that time, I almost thought that I still had hallucinations, because of some things I witnessed and experienced.) Shame.
@JustK4Y1512 Жыл бұрын
Vladimir actually got out 8 years later, got a job at a supermarket, and died a few years later. Wiseman actually invited him to come and meet him and see the film, and according to him, he actually liked it and they had some positive interactions with each other.
@Rebelconformist827 ай бұрын
Woww. I was wondering about him
@CommonSense-iu6wz Жыл бұрын
So heartbreaking that they were pretty much being punished for something that's beyond their control. At the same time, the state would never shell out the funds to put them in a country club. Terrible situation all around. I pray things have improved 🙏
@6Haunted-Days Жыл бұрын
You serious!?! Soooo being treated as a basic human with dignity…..giving them clean rooms and food and all That….in YOUR dubiously educated opinion….is somehow claiming is like a country club? Wtf. That’s a disgusting way too at it. They didn’t WANT or ASK for that level of care and you DAMN WELL KNOW IT. Unbelievable BS. 🙄🤡🚌
@WindTurbineSyndrome Жыл бұрын
Well the state shut these facilities down
@nancyhanscom1374 Жыл бұрын
Their on the streets. They shut them ALL down!!
@MaxCady7.62 Жыл бұрын
Things are worse lmao
@ruthmccadden5146 Жыл бұрын
They're.
@Loopy.Loop27 Жыл бұрын
And they wonder why the public doesn't trust the authorities. It Breaks my heart as I have a daughter with special needs, shes 26 with mental age of 3 and has violent outbursts, I know that in these years she'd have ended up in one of these institutions. Its Heartbreaking ❤
@Mike-es2yg4 ай бұрын
Wow, that's NOT an easy situation to deal with! Your daughter is lucky to have you, I wish you both the best of luck!
@sr.angrygatito6697 Жыл бұрын
Great content sir, you’re giving light to the people that didn’t got it on time and the person that worked so hard yet was denied by their own government.
@barefootandindependent Жыл бұрын
I can't believe you just called his material... 'content' .... right to his face too! I told him you didn't mean it.
@deniserossi6296 Жыл бұрын
I worked in a mental facility, and I only lasted three days as a nurse, I remember going home crying to my mother and telling her what I saw and that I was not going to return. They do abuse the patients, and some of the staff look just as crazy. I remember being lost and walking in on a Dr and some nurses shocking a patients head, and the patient was crying one of the nurses yelled at me and told me to get F out of there. I ended up reporting everything to the state. I went on to get my CLS and run my own lab now. Last I heard, they closed that facility down for good. It takes a special person to work in certain departments, like a mental facility or a burn unit. It's a horrible experience to witness.
@wendysw714 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for reporting what you knew!
@eversosleight Жыл бұрын
Digging the pronunciation of film as "fillim." Top tier material yet again 👍😃👍
@jeffvoitek4392 Жыл бұрын
FillEm' is my fav!
@HockeyBros100 Жыл бұрын
What’s up with that!?
@benrogers5058 Жыл бұрын
@@HockeyBros100irish pronunciation of film
@HockeyBros100 Жыл бұрын
@@benrogers5058 Ty!!
@P-P-Panda Жыл бұрын
@@benrogers5058I didn’t know he was Irish , cool
@jonnybarnard8578 Жыл бұрын
How fitting the judges name was Callous, since he obviously only made that ruling to protect the hospitals reputation, and he was possibly even friends with the superintendent. The only ghoulish thing i saw in this film was that mans smile.
@Bonnatella Жыл бұрын
You know who always seemed to make sense to me? My partner for over 11 years. Sadly, someone who is legitimately mentally unwell can sound and appear very sane a lot of the time. Something like schizophrenia can be hard to pick up when someone is lucid. Mental hospital abuse is disgusting, and shouldn't happen. Some people need to be housed in them for their safety and others unfortunately. Its sad that people who actually need help find it hard to get because so many psychiatric hospitals have been shut down over the years because of abuse and misuse of funds.
@higamerXD Жыл бұрын
i hope one day instead of saying someone is "crazy" we can recognise that there is far more to the world then meets the eye, some people just have a lot more to deal with and the view of what is real and what is not has rotten our society more then almost any other factor. i shudder to think how many people could have had a decent life if the way we treated these sorts of things dint break so many people did you know schizophrenia in india is almost always heard as kind helpful voices? i would think there is a reason for the difference
@theSemiChrist Жыл бұрын
@higamerXD conversely, we HAVE to have an agreed upon view of reality, or everything becomes subjective. Just because someone sees and believes something doesn't make it true. If 9 million people see something and believe it, chances are far better that it's true. Concensus is the only way a society can function properly.
@higamerXD Жыл бұрын
the whole UFO phenomena has shown us how much damage that can do to people who see things just a bit too early, will we ever know how many people died or where judged for a view of reality that one day will be seen as the consensus? while you are right i shudder to think how many have already lived a life of pain from viewing things in a way that in those day's was seen as not real, even tho now we know already just how much more there is to the world. in my opinion, while you are right this is not a way of functioning compatible with a good and kind world, i hope we one day can move away from this way of creating what is true and not @@theSemiChrist
@WK-47 Жыл бұрын
@@theSemiChrist yes, it could be argued that societies can only be formed in the first place if there's a consensus view on reality. Perhaps that's one of the reasons Western society today is so divided, because there's a real lack of such consensus. It'll get worse before it gets better, but it will get better.
@higamerXD Жыл бұрын
@@Steve_Sharpe i very much agree with you i will say, but on the other hand medicating the "unreal" out of people is in itself also doing harm. while you may not believe in spirits that does not mean they care about that. i really really shudder to think what the implications are if the UAP disclosure program is successful. who is to say what is real or not? why do we people feel we know all about that? i agree that we know much and do many thing right when it comes to mental heath but the harm that comes from thinking certain things are not real when they are as tangible as you and me has no positive effects. what will it mean for people if it turns out one *can* hear voices from things non corporeal? i agree that there are people with problems but a lot of influences are not caused by the things we think of. even if we have *solutions* for these problems in a lot of cases the long term effects are still poorly studied. i agree a lot of meds are good but a lot of people could have an even better life with a significantly different interpretation and relation around that which one cant touch
@MissVonDerBishh Жыл бұрын
Thank you for diving deeper on this subject. I had seen it and also had a ton of questions I thought would never be answered. You satisfied my curiosities and I appreciate it. Job well done, love your channel!
@laurasusannalisaharleysantera Жыл бұрын
A lot of abuses happened in mental hospitals and I was a witnesses. They ruined my ex girlfriend.
@Sky-xv4gr Жыл бұрын
I’ve seen stuff like this too
@SigurdThePink Жыл бұрын
Is she getting better? I've been to a mental hospital for s$icide attempt. I had nightmares for a year after that.
@pofuno Жыл бұрын
She’s a skitzo she was prob there for a good reason
@SigurdThePink Жыл бұрын
@@pofunowtf?
@nikobellic8627 Жыл бұрын
Lol no disrespect are you sure it wasn't you that out her in there lol
@JohnnyInvictus Жыл бұрын
Mental hospitals and prisons can be horrendous places with inhumane treatment and abhorrent conditions…. Jimmy Saville was aloud to actually LIVE at Broadmoor mental hospital in England which he used as his personal sex den where he would s.a. the inmates at will,all with the blessings of staff because he brought so much charity money to the hospital….. There are videos of this on KZbin as well as the overall life of this sicko.
@lisamcdonald9792 Жыл бұрын
My heart goes out to these patients. Mental health is so important, especially in this crazy, messed up world. Almost everyone today has some form of mental illness. Getting the help is still a challenge!
@cameraop8210 Жыл бұрын
No they do not. Less than 1% of the population has schizophrenia. If you are referring to the 'worried well' there is a big difference between someone with schizophrenia and someone who is 'burning out' at their job OR someone who isn't coping because they do not have any friends online.
@thepunisher3640 Жыл бұрын
@cameraop8210 he said some form of mental illness not schizophrenia. Read to understand, not to argue for the sake of arguing.
@cameraop8210 Жыл бұрын
the worried well are not mentally ill, its a normal response to circumstances. What an alarmist and incorrect stat to propagate. @@thepunisher3640
@pamelajanewade93811 ай бұрын
Deburke 321 thank you very much for this documentary. My Dad was in a mental hospital in the 1960s he had tried to take his life but surviving. This hospital named Callan Park was in Sydney Australia. They gave him shock treatment and goodness knows what else as my dad got worse after the hospital. There was a Royal Commission into Callan Park and they closed it. A few years after my Dad came home he took his life. So very sad. I tried to look up his medical records but the Government destroyed every persons records. They were hiding the truth.
@asneakylawngnome5792 Жыл бұрын
If something is banned it means there’s someone with power that doesn’t want whatever information is on there getting out. If something’s banned (information, anyway) then there’s more reason to go out and find it.
@NickTaru5 ай бұрын
Solid point... Well said.
@roguetaxidermist3969Ай бұрын
Sure, whatever, but this film was never actually banned, so there's that. The title of this video is pure clickbait.
@asneakylawngnome5792Ай бұрын
@ good to know? My point still stands though.
@immy4104 Жыл бұрын
This all still happens all the time, every day. The neglect, the ignorance, the complete unwillingness to actually do anything to help and an insulted reaction when confronted, make you eat some meds and send you on your way. Its just these days its not so blatant and overt...
@shampers Жыл бұрын
It feels like I'm watching footage from a prisoner of war camp rather than a hospital. I hope Hell is a real place just so the sick f*cks that ran that place can burn for eternity, and it still wouldn't be as bad as the torture those patients went through.
@Brochacho-nl5bk Жыл бұрын
I mean we gunna ignore how he’s saying film?
@PirateofTarrytown6 ай бұрын
He's Irish, buddy
@ifeedyoulead_gaming6 ай бұрын
yoooooooo 😂
@CandyBag6 ай бұрын
The way he says it is a worse offense than anything else described in the video.
@earthdaddy6 ай бұрын
I'm trying to ignore it... but it's really irking me- I think because it seems so deliberate.
@joshuac.64376 ай бұрын
Nah. It's fucking weird
@User56538 Жыл бұрын
psych-wards ironically treat people similar to this even these days... not much has changed. its a psych hospital, it is not a nice place.
@blu4085 Жыл бұрын
Sad fact seems to be though that the guard or people that are so to say supposed to CARE for some sort of well being about the people locked up in there are sadists, cruel narcissistic psychos themselves, given the authority within those walls to basically do whatever they deem necessary at any given time. I have myself witnessed an inmate/patient (they went by different names for some reason) being so drugged out of this world that they naturally would poop and pee all over themselves in a state of delirium..and then being punished for doing so when "waking up" again in the most cruel sadistic manners. Punished for something they had no awareness of having done, like sh****ng themselves when tranquilized out of this world, by the (to begin with) psycho "nurses"/guards" and a Sadistic lunatic of a head psychiatrist! I mean, it was my first job (working as a secretary /receptionist/ telephone operator) and opportunity to start building a curriculum (a State run facility) back 40 yrs ago, and there is no way of forgetting what i saw inside those walls.
@neilus10 ай бұрын
One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest is my favourite movie...im 100% sure this documentary had a big influence on Milos Forman.
@XANAX-Pilled Жыл бұрын
I highly recommend a book called The Psychopath Test, about the fact that if you're diagnosed as such, based on your answers to a series of arbitrary questions, it's near impossible to get out of some state mental hospitals, still. You don't have to commit a crime. It also gets into historical "treatments," like one where people were paired up and handcuffed together, naked, and fed LSD. A person interviewed for the book was cuffed to the Boston Strangler, oddly enough.😂 It's been a few years, but THAT might have been at Bridgewater.
@dianestevens2659 Жыл бұрын
You never insert a naso gastric tube in when the patient is lying down, the liquid would go into the lungs
@garyhomanick61294 ай бұрын
Yes, and if you notice in the next scene, it showed that same patient’s body being placed in the morgue. That sequence was most likely the film director’s way of revealing that he was a first hand witnesses to a m*rder but feared repercussions for exposing it directly by objecting or saying something out loud.
@nicholascharles9625 Жыл бұрын
The sad thing is after they closed those "hospitals" I highly doubt they replaced them with proper mental health facilities
@caileach1 Жыл бұрын
Exactly they closed hospitals then one Gov. Branstad yes tho terrible places. DID NOT REFORM THEM NOR OPEN NEW ONES! IOWA like the rest of the USA . U(nder)S(adistic)A(ttack) on those: different , outsiders, some needing nothing but respect, respite and compassion . Not being ignored , drugged with dangerous psychotropics, and lock away in prisons . Now, so many just dump on our streets!
@lordhumungus1386 Жыл бұрын
I've been in mental hospital three times in my life (mixed personality disorder) and I haven't been for six years now,I'm doing relatively fine in life..but I can tell you all for sure,some of those doctors there are the ones who are REALLY messed up in their heads.
@juanvaldez5422 Жыл бұрын
Personality disorder ? Mixed ? Borderline and a narcissist
@lordhumungus1386 Жыл бұрын
@@juanvaldez5422 have some of borderline but not full to be borderline and zero narcissist. that's one thing I don't have.
@irishcajun85 Жыл бұрын
The ‘????’ part during the initial doctor interview, he says ‘macho’ women. Then he describes what he means. Big, tall, husky women.
@deburke321 Жыл бұрын
Good catch appreciate it!
@irishcajun85 Жыл бұрын
@@deburke321 sure thing! I had to listen twice my own self.
@skottyo Жыл бұрын
I'd have guessed the superintendent was a patient if judging strictly by looks and behaviors.
@6Haunted-Days Жыл бұрын
And you wonder why all these now abandoned buildings that were asylums are haunted AF!! Think of all the pain misery suffering agony and on and on that goes on…..
@Glassandcandy6 ай бұрын
A sort of spiritual successor to this film was a report done by Geraldo Riviera (back when he was still trying to be a real journalist and not a bottom feeding grifter) that was made on children mental hospitals/asylums in New York. The footage is intensely disturbing and genuinely looks like a horror film. Most of the children are locked in empty rooms without clothing, unhealthily thin and covered in their own filth. Apparently they went to the asylum earlier than they told them they would so that they could see what conditions were like before they tried to “clean up” for the camera.
@TungFugl Жыл бұрын
I watched this film recently. It's a tough watch, but I enjoy the style of letting the camera do the talking instead of narration. There's a Danish filmmaker called Lars Engels who made a lot of similar documentaries in this style, focusing on the very rough part of Vesterbro, an area in Copenhagen, and its people who are mostly drunks, prostitutes, and homeless. They are worth watching if you can find them with subtitles.
@BillCoz Жыл бұрын
Fillim or film?
@xenostim Жыл бұрын
@@BillCoz 🤣
@mykemech Жыл бұрын
@@BillCoz Beat me to it... ;)
@James-hz5ef Жыл бұрын
Where do you find these
@niellroystannard801710 ай бұрын
Having been "sectioned" I can tell ya the folks yer dealin with (especially staff) can be truly horrible; it's FAR worse than prison!
@alexpinet3503 Жыл бұрын
Big fan of your content. Keep up the great work!
@mah3223alia5 ай бұрын
UK here. My 15 year old son was arrested after an initial psychotic break ( diagnosed shchitzoaffective disorder) He had his head cut open by a police officer slamming his head against a wall cabinet in the hospital.
@Shannon_Dobbs Жыл бұрын
MY MAN!! I NEVER clicked so fast! Great to see you, Brother.
@justinstilson8028 Жыл бұрын
Abuse like this does indeed still happen,I've seen it and heard it first hand,they use,abuse,confuse,and make fun of the mentally ill. I'm glad places like this were exposed,but we do still warehouse the mentally ill and it's just wrong.. there are other ways,better ways to treat fellow human beings.
@harrynac6017 Жыл бұрын
In the justice system, you have the judge, the jury and lawyers. In a mental clinic, it's only the doctor who decides. A mild conviction still can turn into a long incarceration when you have a lunatic or psychopath for a doctor.
@SusanB-ru7zn2 ай бұрын
They closed the big "mental health facility" where I live some years ago. They turned the entire grounds into a park of sorts. Another facility was not constructed. Then authorities couldn't figure out why we had so many homeless people wandering around. Ummm..... Duh! My heart bleeds for everyone who's ever been put in a place like this. For whatever reason. I imagine a good portion of the people forced to enter one of these places weren't actually mental to begin with, but ultimately became so by the end of their stay. I'll never, ever be able to understand how ANY human being could treat another so horrifically. Same goes for what happened with slavery and the Holocaust. If God made us in His image, what does that tell us about Him? Mull that over for a minute......
@thepoormanspoet3312 Жыл бұрын
Dude I'm so glad to see more of your stuff!! YT is effing you over, bro, I haven't had any alerts to your content, and I've been subbed and a big fan for years. Keep up the good work, man
@deburke321 Жыл бұрын
Appreciate that! Glad this crossed your radar!
@saladfingers. Жыл бұрын
They frustrate you so much (and play mental games on you) that you inevitably lose and look crazy for your reaction. Its awful.
@BlackMetalGraffiti Жыл бұрын
I went to bridgewater for a 30 day evaluation. My lawyer put this as part of my plea deal. Long story short a much older man tried doing things with my 13 year old niece so I hurt him and because it was violent my lawyer made that part of my plea just to make it sound better I guess. I am sure bridgewater was definitely a horrible place back then and it was nothing fantastic when I went 8 years ago but it was definitely a lot more structured and more stable than in this documentary. When I went to state prison after this to some regard it was no different than bridgewater because I believe there was many men there who desperately needed mental health treatment but at bridgewater I met some of the most respectful and caring people that you’d never think anything was wrong. Sometimes you’d get a hint something was wrong and sometimes they were fully lost in their insanity but there was many nice people and when you find out what some of them were there for it paints a very different picture. My reason for writing this is that although it was far from being an ideal place and I wish they did shut the lights off more to sleep, bridgewater seems to be doing a lot better than in this documentary.
@jamesross9724 Жыл бұрын
that,sir is how it;s done.
@Svvithred Жыл бұрын
That is definitely how to deal with these vile creatures and I truly hope that you and your niece are doing much better now.
@BlackMetalGraffiti Жыл бұрын
@@Svvithred thanks buddy I appreciate that a lot, she’s about to be 22 in college and is doing very well. My sister lost custody of my niece because she wasn’t taking her to school and at the time my sister was going through addiction so I took custody of her. In a lot of ways she felt like my daughter and by doing what I did to that monster I did almost lose her I can’t picture many people being able to control their emotions in that type of situation.
@lasoleil8515Ай бұрын
is it just me or does he constantly traveling with the word film ?😂😂
@davekennedy6315 Жыл бұрын
I don`t get your shock at doctors and orderlies smoking? Almost everyone used to smoke and smoking at work was no issue until much, much later. I smoked at work throughout the 90s here in the UK and it was only banned in the early 2000s. Back then i don`t suppose anyone knew about passive smoking until the 70s/80s?
@Bonnatella Жыл бұрын
Good point. That shows how young this human must be. They don't remember a time when not that long ago we could still smoke almost anywhere, even department stores.
@kelechi_77 Жыл бұрын
Yes few decades ago people smoked in airports, on planes even on TV. No one really cared
@davekennedy6315 Жыл бұрын
Things have changed a lot I suppose? Doctors even used to advise people smoke for asthma before it was realised just how bad it is for you. Nicotine is an incredibly difficult addiction to quit too. It took me 15 years or so to quit.
@deburke321 Жыл бұрын
I actually had a larger point to make that I forgot to include. At around 11 minutes when the body is being prepared for the funeral, a bit of ash falls onto the mans body, he's later cremated meaning his ashes and the cigarette ash are mixed together. It's widely believed Wiseman included this to show that the workers at the hospital put a similar value on the patients and there cigarettes, just disposable things that eventually turn into ash. Of course I forgot to mention any of that so it just looks like I mentioned them smoking for no reason but there was supposed to be a larger point haha.
@niteshades_promise Жыл бұрын
They used to deliver babies with a cig hanging out their mouths. Check the cervix with no gloves. Good times.
@snakemanmike Жыл бұрын
This kind of abuse happened everywhere in the US in those times. I worked in a state mental hospital in the 1970's in Tennessee. The same kind of things you see here was happening there.
@SusanB-ru7zn2 ай бұрын
Are you referring to Lakeshore, by chance?
@BossJoeMama Жыл бұрын
I just got through watching Titicut Follies and I found it most interesting. To clarify, the guy hosting, and singing at the talent show at the beginning and the end of the movie, as well as in the birthday scene was a guard named Eddie (with a flair for showmanship), and not the superintendent. I was curious about this and researched it. The superintendent was a man by the name of Charles W. Gaughan, who was the super from 1959 - 1985. He may or may not have been in the movie, but there are pics of him online...
@CleanerBeats6 ай бұрын
Great production fam, also very intriguing- shared and subbed for sure
@malcolmx6007 Жыл бұрын
The fact the documentary at one point could only be shown for educational purposes explains why one of my high school teachers here in Massachusetts was able to show it to the class. It's equally disturbing today as it was back then
@alleahsasseville Жыл бұрын
I searched out this documentary after seeing your original upload... to say it is disturbing would be an understatement.
@HailHydreigon Жыл бұрын
I live in the US now, and I’m scared to look up banned movies. Internet Service Providers send you letters ordering you to stop downloading illegally or banned movies. Lol Thank you for this video, Mr. Deburke!
@WK-47 Жыл бұрын
I know KZbinrs are always pushing them, but I honestly recommend using a VPN. Neither your ISP nor anyone else has any business monitoring or restricting your activities, as long as you're not breaking the law. If they can't respect that, we have to take steps to retain our rights.
@HailHydreigon Жыл бұрын
@@WK-47 agreed! I have a phone still from my previous country that I can put a VPN on and watch movies and download games but when I find a good VPN I will. Thank you!
@user-qb8qm4mp5n7 ай бұрын
It is no longer a banned film since 1991.
@efe_aydal Жыл бұрын
These type of contents is what I like the most.
@EspyFernandes-tf2fm11 ай бұрын
They up'd his dosage to get him to keep quiet. He was too clever / normal for their liking. One can hear in the doctors voice that he's the psychotic one. Sick world. 😢
@Byezbozhnik2 ай бұрын
It is mentioned in this video, at least a couple of times -I've just started watching it-, that some member of hospital staff was smoking. That remark is so 2020's! It doesn't need mentioning; in the 20th century we would casually smoke at work or in other situations and we were still able to normally perform our duties or do anything -in case there's any doubt about the latter! There's nothing remarkable about people smoking. The new generations are awfully prudish!
@brittlizzzzzz Жыл бұрын
I watched this doc a few years ago, and damn, it has stuck with me
@randomunicorn1578 Жыл бұрын
The superintendent looks like he should be an inmate. He's definitely not right.
@z.s.7992 Жыл бұрын
Your movie reviews are great Deburke. I hope you would do some more documentary reviews in the future
@trash_bender420 Жыл бұрын
Love your channel dude, youre always talking about something super interesting that I've never even heard of. Keep up the great work ❤ Also, am I tripping or are you pronouncing "film" as "fill-im" ? Lol i cant unhear it
@Ralfy_fig Жыл бұрын
it driving me utterly insane the way he says "film" edit: upon further inspection, it is an irish thing
@trash_bender420 Жыл бұрын
@@Ralfy_fig it's always an Irish thing
@JimeLello11 ай бұрын
One of the most important documentary ever
@stephaniemanchester-chermo3840 Жыл бұрын
We’re clearly headed back to this same type of “treatment” no matter if you’re sane or insane, just look around and observe your local hospitals.
@JesseVenturaHat10 ай бұрын
Oh yeah. I went to the hospital for alcohol withdrawal and they were begging me to willingly commit myself to the psych ward they call "behavioral health"
@tanjameijer589 Жыл бұрын
My great grandmother and I lived in the same mental institution. She in 1950 and I was there 2006/2021. This mistreated/straight out torture isn't changed in the slightest. It is here well known that most people that are forced in mental institutions are never getting out. The handfull of people that get out are left with scars for life.
@Nybson9 ай бұрын
80,000 feet of film. If they used 35 mm then it’s 16 frames per foot. 16x80,000= 1,280,000 frames. Thought this was neat, figured someone else might also. 4:03
@donniewoodland8467 Жыл бұрын
When I was 16 I was locked up in the Holland building at Taunton state hospital..it was a DYS lock up ...and the abuse we went through I'll never forget..sick would and people..
@PenguinVideoStore Жыл бұрын
Thank you for reviewing this documentary with the dignity it deserves. I've always hated seeing people post about Titticut Follies just to go "WOW it's so WEIRD!" but it's a genuinely horrifying look into what the post-war mental health industry was like. People were herded into these facilities and just treated as free-range behavioural guinea pigs, if not outright experimented on. And you're right, it's an alarming thing to think about how the hospital staff were on their "best behaviour" back then...
@weholdparties Жыл бұрын
Thank you for bringing this to people’s awareness. It’s important to keep in mind that these things are still occurring today across the country. Not just to people who have committed crimes, but to average citizens and even children. The ableism in this country is RAMPANT and it is the complete disregard of those with disabilities that allows these abuses to continue. 25% of the population (and counting because people ignore how disabling the ongoing COVID pandemic is) are disabled. But the way you would see able bodied talk about it, we hardly exist at all. Disability is the only marginalized status that you are guaranteed to enter at sometime in your life. It might be sooner than you think.
@banjogyro Жыл бұрын
They only raised my interest by banning it
@Flunk75 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info man subscribed
@deburke3215 ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@BaritonePapi Жыл бұрын
Film is a crazy word to keep mispronouncing
@ThePotatoWaveOfficial6 ай бұрын
AI voice perhaps?
@PirateofTarrytown6 ай бұрын
He's Irish. Why everybudddyyy keep tripping over that
@gregynutbutter6 ай бұрын
@PirateofTarrytown he's not Irish hahahaha he's clearly ethnic and has an American accent
@chanmang5 ай бұрын
I didn't notice it until you said it.
@theabhorrentchef72265 ай бұрын
You must not be familiar with The Despot of Antrim. When I first saw some of his videos I was shocked that someone could pronounce film with 2 syllables. He’s got an excuse though - he’s Scottish or Irish or something like that. A bloke or a chap if you will. Watch his “worst of woke awards” It is absolute gold if you’re into entertainment. And it’s even awesome if you’re not just because. He’s only done awards for 2023 and 24 - 23 isn’t bad but you can tell he learned and advanced in that year in between and I can’t wait for the 2025 awards show.
@Realjuna Жыл бұрын
Real hero, rip & god bless to all those souls. They are no longer down here on hell of a earth. Great commentary & video bruh
@brianbadonde9251 Жыл бұрын
This is like if an AI watched 7000 hours of KZbin video essays and then made its own channel
@kingelvis55026 ай бұрын
11:25 - he is lubricating the feeding tube with vasoline to help it slip down through the nasal passage and throat into the intestine.
@shroudedlands9550 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting to me how you often mention staff smoking. To modern eyes doctors smoking around patients is shocking. When I was a child in the 80's people smoked everywhere all the time. Smokers never considered anyone else and society permitted it as so many people smoked back then. No one watching this at the time in the 60's would have even thought this odd.
@KandyillaThanu5 ай бұрын
I’ve been here a few times to drop inmates off going to prison this is about 20 mins from where I grew up and everyone complained and a female that was with us going to prison which was the next stop had told me about this documentary and I’m just seeing this and it breaks my heart
@allynfornow Жыл бұрын
Love the video!!! pretty sure film is one syllable tho.
@Nonayabizness3609 ай бұрын
My great uncle was in Eloise because he had a “ nervous breakdown “ my mother talks about how nice the gardens were that they sat in to visit together. My great grandmother died from Tuberculosis and my grandmother, her daughter told me that they hid her mother in a small room in their attic so that the doctors and police wouldn’t come to their home and take my great grandmother to the closest asylum. They took a lot of people to those asylum’s because they said Tuberculosis was so contagious and they left them in rooms to die. She died a year later with her family around her instead of one of these horrible places.
@sleepyproduction7166 Жыл бұрын
I been to a couple mental places for depression and I went in on everyone. They don’t help people they don’t even try. I got them to actually put in effort and do what the state thought they did, they had us sign papers that we did group stuff or sessions but didn’t actually do them. I changed that in Massillon and I hope they still try
@eatmoreporkporky4342 Жыл бұрын
Massillon state in Ohio?
@sleepyproduction7166 Жыл бұрын
@@eatmoreporkporky4342 heartland, in Massillon OH. Judging by the reviews I just seen to find the name out, it didn’t stick to actually doing the therapy and group activities. Just making people sign the papers that tells the state those are being completed.
@KMc-cw3qt3 ай бұрын
Disturbing but incredibly important film. Thank you for posting.