ICAPA Network · Resource Library
On The Record

The TTI in Media: Our History, Our Fight, Our Progress

A chronicled history of our movement in action, from the earliest days shining a light on this shadowy industry to the present, where real change was made possible by brave survivors and the media who believed them.

Our History. Our Fight. Our Progress.

For decades, survivors raised their voices. Then 2020 changed everything.

For years before the world started paying attention, survivors of the Troubled Teen Industry were already speaking. They were testifying, organizing, building websites, filing lawsuits, and telling anyone who would listen what happened inside these programs. Coverage existed, but it was scattered. The industry moved quietly, protected by its own opacity and the shame it deliberately inflicted on the young people it harmed.

Then, in 2020, that changed. Paris Hilton stood on the steps of Provo Canyon School with hundreds of survivors and told her story on camera. Bhad Bhabie posted videos from inside Turn-About Ranch while she was still there. Social media carried survivor accounts faster than any PR firm could contain them. Suddenly, editors were calling. Investigations that had been quietly gestating for years moved to front pages. Congress started listening.

What you will find here is the record of that fight: the reporters who stayed on this beat, the articles that moved policy, the documentaries that made people see, and the books and podcasts that gave survivors language for what was done to them. This is our history. This is our fight. And this is our progress, on the record.

The Reporters Who Stayed

Journalists With Sustained Coverage

Most news about the Troubled Teen Industry is reactive: a death, a closure, a lawsuit. The journalists below are different. They have returned to this beat for years, built deep sourcing with survivors and advocates, and produced the work that has directly shaped legislation, prompted federal investigations, and shifted public understanding. Their bylines are cited in congressional hearings and federal reports.

Jessica Miller Schreifels
The Salt Lake Tribune

The definitive journalist on the Utah TTI beat. Her multi-year series "Inside Utah's Troubled Teen Industry" drew on ICPC placement data, state licensing records, and survivor testimony to document the full scale of the industry. Her reporting underpins the placement statistics that ICAPA advocates cite in every legislative meeting. Co-led the award-winning "Sent Away" collaboration with APM Reports and KUER, which won a Barlett and Steele Award for investigative journalism.

Tyler Kingkade
NBC News

NBC News national reporter who has produced some of the most consequential recent TTI journalism. His investigation into Diamond Ranch Academy following 17-year-old Taylor Goodridge's death contributed directly to the facility losing its license. Covered the passage of SICAA, the "Warehouses of Neglect" Senate report, and the BRIDGES Act introduction. His work is regularly cited in state and federal legislative proceedings and has prompted direct regulatory action.

Maia Szalavitz
Mother Jones · New York Times · Time

The journalist who effectively launched modern coverage of the TTI. Her 2006 book Help at Any Cost prompted a Congressional inquiry and a GAO investigation that confirmed thousands of abuse cases. Her 2007 Mother Jones piece "The Cult That Spawned the Tough-Love Teen Industry" remains the definitive account of Synanon's role in creating the industry's foundational abuse model. Has continued covering the TTI and addiction policy for major outlets for two decades.

Art Levine
MindSite News · Washington Monthly · Newsweek

Investigative journalist and author of Mental Health, Inc. (2017), which included major chapters on TTI deaths and abuse. Has covered the industry since the early 2000s, and in 2024 launched a sustained multi-part series for MindSite News building directly on the Senate Finance Committee's "Warehouses of Neglect" report. One of the few journalists who consistently follows the money and holds both program operators and their investors to account.

David Fuchs
KUER / NPR Utah

Public radio reporter who contributed ground-level southern Utah coverage to the landmark "Sent Away" collaboration with the Salt Lake Tribune and APM Reports. His on-the-ground reporting from facilities near St. George helped transform what could have been a regional story into a nationally relevant exposé. The joint series won a Barlett and Steele Award and has been cited in multiple state and federal oversight efforts.

Adam Piore
Rolling Stone

Investigative journalist whose January 2023 Rolling Stone piece on Agape Boarding School documented abuse in extraordinary detail, including beatings, starvation, choking, and a padded restraint room. The school announced it was closing within days of publication. A landmark example of how a single well-reported piece can directly cause a facility to shut down, and a model for what accountability journalism about the TTI can accomplish.

Bennett Haeberle
NBC 5 Chicago Investigates

NBC 5 investigative reporter who has covered the TTI for over six years, with a focus on youth deaths at Utah facilities and how state regulators respond. His reporting on the death of 17-year-old Biruk Silvers at Discovery Ranch prompted a Highland Park family to become national advocates. His work was cited in the 2024 U.S. Senate report on residential treatment facilities, a rare distinction that speaks to the direct policy impact of sustained local investigative journalism.

The Missoulian Investigative Team
Montana Missoulian

The Missoulian's "Troubled Kids, Troubled System" series is one of the most comprehensive regional investigations into TTI programs and state oversight failures. The series documents how facilities operating in Montana have escaped accountability through regulatory gaps, and how Montana's subsequent 2023 oversight legislation came directly from this kind of sustained local investigative journalism. Note: the full series is behind a paywall.

Landmark and Recent Journalism

Articles and Investigations

Listed chronologically. Pre-2020 pieces form the historical foundation. Post-2020 pieces document the modern wave of coverage sparked by "This Is Paris" and the Breaking Code Silence movement. Many major investigations are behind paywalls but are linked so you can access them with a subscription or library card.

Before 2020: The Foundation
2007
Mother Jones
The Cult That Spawned the Tough-Love Teen Industry
The foundational piece tracing how Synanon, a 1950s drug rehabilitation cult, became the direct ideological ancestor of nearly every behavior modification program in the TTI. Essential reading for understanding why the abuse follows such predictable patterns across unrelated facilities.
2008
GAO / Congress
Residential Programs: Selected Cases of Death, Abuse, and Deceptive Marketing
The landmark GAO report that confirmed thousands of abuse allegations and at least 10 deaths in TTI facilities between 1990 and 2004. Prompted by Rep. George Miller's request after Maia Szalavitz's book. Resulted in congressional hearings and the first major legislative push to regulate the industry. Still the primary federal document advocates cite for historical context.
1998–2009
WWASP History
WWASP: The World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools
Founded by Robert Lichfield in 1998, WWASP became the largest TTI network in history: over 20 programs across the US, Mexico, Jamaica, Costa Rica, Samoa, and the Czech Republic. At its peak, 2,300 students were enrolled across facilities with combined tuition income exceeding $90 million per year. Programs were shut down across multiple countries after investigations into child abuse, dog cages, starvation, and forced labor. Lichfield, who ties directly to Cross Creek Programs in La Verkin, Utah, has never been criminally charged. He was a fundraising co-chair for Mitt Romney's presidential campaign. The 2024 Netflix series "The Program" reignited national attention on Lichfield and his unaccountable empire. See: wwaspsurvivors.com for full program history and survivor testimony.
2020: The Wave Begins
2021
2023
2023
Rolling Stone
Inside the Christian Reform School From Hell
An investigation into Agape Boarding School in Missouri documenting beatings, choking, starvation, and a padded restraint room. Agape announced it was closing within days of publication. One of the clearest examples in TTI history of a single piece of investigative journalism directly triggering a facility's closure.
2023
NBC News
After Teen's Death, Schools Rethink Sending Children Out of State
Following the death of 17-year-old Taylor Goodridge at Diamond Ranch Academy in Utah, Kingkade's investigation prompted state licensing proceedings. The piece examines the practice of schools and child welfare systems sending students across state lines to facilities with documented abuse histories, the loophole at the heart of ICAPA's legislative work.
2023
Salt Lake Tribune
A Girl Died at Maple Lake Academy After Vomiting for Days. Now, Her Parents Are Suing.
14-year-old Sofia Soto died at Maple Lake Academy in Spanish Fork, Utah after staff failed to provide medical care as her health deteriorated over days. Her parents allege she was left to die in a hallway while a staff member assigned to check on residents had fallen asleep. Particularly damning: Utah regulators had previously tried to let Maple Lake keep its license even after the death. The article documents how DHS abandoned its own investigation before it could be used as evidence at an appeal hearing, prompting Breaking Code Silence protests outside the facility.
2023
Youth Today
Utah 'Troubled Teen' Treatment Facility Shuttered in the Wake of Death
The definitive account of Diamond Ranch Academy's closure following the death of 17-year-old Taylor Goodridge. Ranta Olson obtained internal state emails showing Utah regulators were pressured to lift DRA's enrollment ban under threat of litigation, with the assistant attorney general writing that removing the ban "would go a long way to mend fences" with the facility. The state ultimately revoked DRA's license only one day after a Commerce panel found it had breached the standard of care. The reporting revealed two previous client deaths at the facility and a prior $750,000 judgment after a student suicide.
2020: The Wave Begins
2024
NBC News
12-Year-Old's Death at North Carolina Wilderness Camp Ruled a Homicide
A 12-year-old boy died during his first night at Trails Carolina wilderness camp in Lake Toxaway, NC, after staff required him to sleep in a sealed bivy sack. The outer waterproof panel was secured with an alarm because the inner mesh layer was torn, making the enclosure airtight. Counselors could not see inside during night checks. The medical examiner ruled the death a homicide by asphyxia. Trails Carolina had its license revoked in October 2024. The district attorney declined to bring criminal charges. The facility's parent company, Family Help and Wellness, also operated Elevations RTC in Utah, which faced its own NBC News investigation the same year.
2024
NBC News
Residential Treatment Centers Put Profits Ahead of Children's Safety, Senate Report Finds
Coverage of the landmark Senate Finance Committee "Warehouses of Neglect" report, a 136-page, two-year investigation naming four major operators. The report documented that abuse "inevitably and by design" is built into the for-profit residential treatment business model. This is the most consequential government document in TTI history since the 2008 GAO report.
2024
NBC News
Former Students Report Injuries and Isolation at Utah Facility for Troubled Teens
An investigation into Elevations RTC in Syracuse, Utah, documenting 105 self-harm incidents and 138 physical restraints in a single year. Former students described being instructed to lie to hospital staff about injuries. The facility's parent company also operated the wilderness camp where a child died, raising questions about how the same operator can continue receiving placements across multiple facilities.
2024
MindSite News
Troubled Teen Industry is 'Taxpayer-Funded Child Abuse,' Senate Report and Paris Hilton Say. Where Are the Government Regulators?
Levine's deep analysis of the "Warehouses of Neglect" report focuses on the money: how Medicaid and state child welfare dollars are flowing directly to abusive operators. Names the four companies scrutinized by the Senate, documents specific abuse allegations at each, and asks why federal regulators have not acted despite having the evidence. Essential for understanding the financial architecture of the TTI.
2024
Salt Lake Magazine
In the Problematic 'Troubled Teen' Industry, All Roads Lead to Utah
A thorough overview of Utah's central role in the industry, its "whack-a-mole" problem with facility rebranding, and the web of connections between programs. Covers the Trails Carolina homicide ruling, the Disability Law Center's scathing inspection report, and why even post-SB 127 regulatory changes have not meaningfully reduced abuse at Utah facilities.
2024
NBC News
Paris Hilton-Backed Bill to Study the Troubled-Teen Industry Clears Congress
Definitive coverage of SICAA's passage, tracing the full arc from Paris Hilton's 2020 documentary to Biden's signature on Christmas Eve 2024. Describes the National Academies study mandate, the federal work group, and what advocates are watching for next. The article ICAPA advocates will share most in 2025 to explain why this moment matters and what still needs to happen.
2025 to Present
Live Coverage

Recent News by Topic

These feeds pull the latest Google News coverage of the TTI, organized by topic. Updated continuously. Use these to stay current before constituent meetings, lobby days, or legislative hearings.

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Covers: bill introductions, legislative hearings, laws signed, regulatory changes, federal reports, state-level TTI oversight legislation.

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Covers: facility closures, child deaths, abuse investigations, lawsuits, license revocations, and criminal charges at specific TTI programs.

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Covers: investigative journalism, national coverage of the industry as a whole, academic research, and major exposés from credible outlets.

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Covers: survivor advocacy, congressional testimonies, press conferences, protests, awareness campaigns, and survivor-led organizations in the news.

Watch

Featured Documentaries

Two of the most important recent documentaries on the TTI. Both are on major streaming platforms and have directly generated public pressure, new abuse complaints, and criminal investigations.

Netflix · Limited Series · 2024
The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping
Director Katherine Kubler returns to the Academy at Ivy Ridge, the WWASP-affiliated New York school where she was sent as a teenager, and discovers a broader network of abuse, fraud, and money trails. Released March 2024. Within days of release, the St. Lawrence County DA received 50+ new abuse complaints and launched a fresh investigation.
Watch on Netflix →
Max (HBO Max) · Limited Series · 2024
Teen Torture, Inc.
Directed by Tara Malone, this three-part Max Original series follows survivors and whistleblowers including Chelsea Filer (ICAPA Network), Jen Robison, Jenna Bulis, Allen Knoll, the Bethel Boys, and Bhad Bhabie, tracing abuse through Provo Canyon School, Agape, Bethel, and others. Premiered July 11, 2024. Evan Wright, a primary survivor featured in the series, died by suicide within days of its release.
Watch on Max →

More Documentaries

Netflix · 2023
Hell Camp: Teen Nightmare
Documents the Challenger Foundation, a Utah wilderness program where 16-year-old Kristen Chase died of heatstroke in 1990. Traces founder Steve Cartisano's history of abuse, closure, and reinvention under new names. Available on Netflix.
Watch on Netflix →
YouTube Originals · 2020
This Is Paris
Paris Hilton's documentary in which she publicly disclosed for the first time the abuse she experienced at Provo Canyon School. Now at 80+ million views, it is the single piece of media most responsible for igniting the modern TTI advocacy movement. Watch it before any lobby day.
Paris Shares Her Survivor Story →
Documentary · 2014
Kidnapped for Christ
Filmmaker Kate Logan went to document Escuela Caribe in the Dominican Republic as a Christian behavior modification program and instead exposed a facility where children were transported against their will and subjected to severe abuse. One of the early modern TTI documentaries.
Find on Streaming →
Documentary · 2017
The Last Stop
A documentary on the Elan School in Maine, one of the longest-running and most abusive programs in TTI history. The school operated from 1970 to 2011 and is known for a "ring" practice in which students were forced to fight each other. Important for understanding the historical roots of confrontational therapy models.
Find on Streaming →
Documentary · 1983
Children of Darkness
An early, landmark documentary on the Elan School and the broader institutional abuse of youth in the 1980s. The film received an Academy Award nomination and was one of the first mainstream media investigations into what would become the TTI. A piece of historical context every advocate should know.
IMDb →
Fiction Based on Reality

Films About the TTI

Several films have dramatized or directly adapted real events and programs from the TTI. These are not documentaries, but their subject matter is grounded in documented abuse, survivor accounts, and real facility histories.

Drama · 2008
Boot Camp
Based directly on WWASP's Paradise Cove program in Samoa, where American teenagers were sent and subjected to severe conditions. One of the first major films to dramatize the TTI experience with the WWASP-specific transport-and-isolate model. Stars Mila Kunis and Peter Stormare.
IMDb →
Drama · 2015
Over the GW
Semi-autobiographical drama based on a survivor's experience at a CEDU-affiliated program. Depicts the psychological manipulation techniques, the level system, and the isolation from family that characterize behavior modification programs. A quieter but deeply accurate representation of the day-to-day experience.
IMDb →
Drama · 2013
Coldwater
A teenager is transported in the middle of the night to a remote military-style juvenile rehabilitation camp in the Arizona desert. The film documents the escalating violence and systematic dehumanization inside the facility with clinical precision. Widely regarded as one of the most accurate fictional depictions of what daily life inside a TTI program actually looks like. Based on survivor accounts.
IMDb →
Drama · 1994 · French
L'Eau Froide (Cold Water)
Olivier Assayas' French film depicting a teenage girl forcibly placed in an institutional program after being labeled "troubled." While set in France, it captures the universal dynamics of parental desperation, institutional control, and adolescent resistance that define the TTI experience globally. An important early film for historical context.
IMDb →
Documentary Drama · 2012
Aaron Bacon
Based on the 1994 death of 16-year-old Aaron Bacon at North Star Expeditions, a wilderness program in Utah. Bacon died of untreated peritonitis after staff ignored his deteriorating condition for days. The case became a landmark in understanding how wilderness programs use medical neglect as punishment.
IMDb →
TV Movie · 2010
Trapped: The Alex Cooper Story
Based on the true story of Alex Cooper, who was removed from her home by her Mormon parents after coming out as gay and placed in a conversion therapy home in Utah. Documents eight months of abuse intended to "cure" her homosexuality. A specific window into LGBTQ+ youth in the TTI, one of the most vulnerable subpopulations.
IMDb →
You See It Everywhere

TV Shows With TTI References

Troubled teen programs have become so embedded in American culture that you encounter references to them in everything from prestige dramas to sitcoms. Some shows depict programs directly. Others use institutional confinement, wilderness camps, or behavior modification as plot devices. Survivors report that spotting these references is both validating and surreal.

And then you turn into this guy.

Dr. Phil
Sent multiple teens to Turn-About Ranch live on air. Bhad Bhabie (Danielle Bregoli) became an activist after being sent to a program featured on the show. The most direct TV pipeline into the TTI.
Yellowjackets
Wilderness survival trauma, isolation, group hierarchy, and the long shadow of institutional experiences on adult life. Deeply resonant with TTI survivors, who describe it as the most accurate representation of the psychological dynamics they experienced.
Euphoria
Rue's arc through residential treatment facilities, withdrawal, and the confrontational group therapy model is drawn from real behavior modification program dynamics. HBO's most honest depiction of what teen mental health treatment actually looks like inside.
iCarly / Drake & Josh
"Troubled Waters Home for Boys" is referenced repeatedly across both shows. The facility is played for laughs, but the portrayal of sending misbehaving teens to remote institutions tracks remarkably closely with how parents are actually sold on the TTI.
Pretty Little Liars
Radley Sanitarium is a recurring setting where teens are sent against their will and subjected to institutional control, secret surveillance, and unchecked staff authority. Reflects the institutional horror genre the TTI has inspired.
American Horror Story: Asylum
The institutional abuse depicted, including medical experimentation, religious justification for confinement, and staff impunity, maps closely to documented practices at WWASP-affiliated religious programs and conversion therapy facilities.
Intervention (A&E)
Multiple episodes end with subjects being transported to residential treatment programs, sometimes including the same facilities under investigation for abuse. A direct window into how the industry markets to families in crisis.
Grey's Anatomy
Multiple arcs involving teen psych holds and residential treatment settings. The show reflects widespread normalization of youth institutionalization in American medical culture, with patients treated as problems to be managed rather than people to be supported.
Orange Is the New Black
While an adult prison series, its documentation of how institutional systems dehumanize, control, and gaslight people is directly applicable to TTI survivor experiences. Many survivors describe the parallels as uncomfortably exact.
The 100
The premise of sending "delinquents" into a hostile environment as a solution to behavioral problems while the powerful observe from safety is a very direct metaphor for the TTI experience. The show became unexpectedly popular in TTI survivor communities.
60 Minutes / 20/20
Both shows have aired multiple investigative segments on specific TTI programs dating back to the 1990s. The 20/20 segment on Straight, Inc. (1990) and multiple 60 Minutes pieces on WWASP programs are foundational viewing for advocates.
Primetime / Inside Edition
Inside Edition's 2003 investigation into Casa by the Sea and High Impact included the first helicopter footage over High Impact's compound, capturing students in stress positions and dog cages. Some of the most historically significant TV news footage from the early TTI accountability era.
Essential Reading

Books About the TTI

These books range from foundational investigative journalism to survivor memoirs to academic research. They provide the depth of context that a 90-minute documentary cannot, and many are directly cited in legislative hearings and GAO investigations. The books marked as survivor memoirs are primary source material: experiences that happened to real people in real facilities.

Investigative Journalism and Non-Fiction

Help at Any Cost cover
Investigative
Help at Any Cost
Maia Szalavitz · 2006

The book that started the modern accountability movement. Szalavitz documents the TTI's origins in Synanon, the failure of "tough love" therapies, and specific programs that killed or traumatized teens in the name of treatment. Prompted a Congressional inquiry and a GAO investigation. Required reading before any lobby meeting.

Mental Health Inc cover
Investigative
Mental Health, Inc.
Art Levine · 2017

Award-winning investigative journalist Art Levine's exposé of the mental health system, with major chapters on the TTI. Covers deaths, abuse, pharmaceutical industry complicity, and the failure of oversight from the VA to juvenile residential treatment. Levine has continued the investigation in an ongoing series for MindSite News since 2024.

Unbroken Brain cover
Investigative / Policy
Unbroken Brain
Maia Szalavitz · 2016

Szalavitz's follow-up reframes addiction as a learning disorder rather than a moral failure, directly challenging the punitive "tough love" model that underlies TTI programs. Essential for advocates who need to articulate why behavior modification programs are not only abusive but scientifically discredited.

Breaking Their Will cover
Investigative
Breaking Their Will
Janet Heimlich · 2011

Investigative journalist Janet Heimlich documents the intersection of religious authority and child abuse, covering faith-based TTI programs, conversion therapy facilities, and the legal exemptions that allow religion to shield abuse from prosecution. Directly relevant to ICAPA's work on programs operating as religious academies outside state licensing.

Troubled cover
Investigative / Memoir
Troubled
Rob Henderson · 2024

A memoir and social critique from a survivor of foster care and the youth institutional system. Henderson documents how children from disadvantaged backgrounds are disproportionately funneled into congregate care and juvenile facilities. Provides essential context for understanding how race, class, and the foster care pipeline intersect with the TTI.

An American Gulag cover
Investigative
An American Gulag
Lou Kilzer · 2001

An early and deeply reported investigation into behavior modification programs, written before the modern advocacy movement existed. Documents the origins of the escort industry, international program expansion, and how programs used bureaucratic complexity to evade regulation. A foundational historical text for understanding how the TTI achieved its scale.

Cult History and Industry Origins

Survivor Memoirs

These are primary sources. Each one documents lived experience inside a specific program and provides the granular, personal detail that no government report can supply. They are powerful testimony tools for advocates and should be read as such.

Boy Erased cover
Survivor Memoir
Boy Erased
Garrard Conley · 2016

A memoir of Conley's experience in conversion therapy at a faith-based program in Arkansas, where he was sent by his Baptist pastor father after coming out as gay. Made into a 2018 film starring Lucas Hedges and Nicole Kidman. One of the most widely read survivor accounts of LGBTQ+ youth in the TTI, and essential for understanding the intersection of religious exemptions and conversion therapy within the industry.

Jesus Land cover
Survivor Memoir
Jesus Land
Julia Scheeres · 2005

Scheeres documents her and her adopted Black brother's experience in an evangelical household and their eventual placement at Escuela Caribe, a Christian behavior modification program in the Dominican Republic. One of the first survivor memoirs to reach a mainstream audience. Brings the international TTI and the racial dimensions of institutional placement into sharp focus.

Dead Inside cover
Survivor Memoir
Dead Inside
Cyndy Etler · 2019

Etler's account of her time in Straight, Inc., the foundational TTI program that gave rise to dozens of successor organizations. Straight Inc. ran from 1976 to 1993 across multiple states and held adolescents incommunicado in warehouses. Etler's testimony captures the daily mechanics of thought reform and the long-term trauma of being institutionalized as a teenager.

Surviving Bethel cover
Survivor Memoir
Surviving Bethel
Bethel Boys Survivors · 2022

A collective memoir by survivors of Bethel Boys Academy in Missouri, one of the programs featured in HBO Max's Teen Torture Inc. Allen Knoll, one of the Bethel Boys featured in the documentary, contributed to the advocacy that eventually led to the facility's closure and criminal charges. Documenting abuse in a religious school that operated for years without state oversight.

Straightling cover
Survivor Memoir
Straightling
Angela Smith · 2012

Smith's account of her years inside Straight, Inc. and its successor programs documents the escalating abuse tactics used within the "therapeutic community" model. Written from the perspective of someone who was both a program participant and later a staff member, offering a rare dual view of how the system operates from both sides.

Paris: The Memoir cover
Survivor Memoir
Paris: The Memoir
Paris Hilton · 2023

Hilton's memoir includes extensive chapters on her time at CEDU, wilderness programs, and Provo Canyon School in Utah, including new allegations of sexual assault under the guise of gynecological exams. Written after years of advocacy work, it connects her personal history directly to her congressional testimony and the legislative campaigns that produced SICAA. Essential for advocates meeting with lawmakers who are familiar with Hilton's public advocacy.

Note on Book Covers

Cover images load from Open Library (archive.org). If a cover is unavailable, the card still displays. Links go to Amazon but most titles are also available through your local library, WorldCat, and many as ebooks via Libby.

Listen

Podcasts

Audio journalism and survivor storytelling have been central to the TTI accountability movement. The podcasts below provide depth, survivor testimony, and investigative reporting that complements the print journalism. Note: we do not feature any podcasts that primarily platform representatives of Unsilenced or its affiliated organizations.

Gooned
Emma Lehman · 12 Episodes · 2024

An independent investigative podcast in which journalist Emma Lehman goes undercover at a NATSAP (the TTI trade organization) conference, interviews survivors and former staff, and documents the full pipeline from educational consultants through program admission. Episode 7, in which Lehman attends the NATSAP conference posing as a parent, is particularly important for advocates. The most rigorous original podcast journalism about the TTI produced in the past several years.

Sent Away
APM Reports / Salt Lake Tribune / KUER

The award-winning collaborative podcast that anchors the Salt Lake Tribune and APM Reports' investigation into Utah's TTI. Follows specific survivors and documents how Utah became the epicenter of the industry, with reporters Jessica Miller, David Fuchs, and the APM team sharing the investigative work behind the story. Winner of a Barlett and Steele Award. Essential listening before any meeting with Utah lawmakers.

Trapped in Treatment
Paris Hilton / iHeartMedia · 2022

Paris Hilton's docu-style investigative series produced with iHeartMedia and hosted by Rebecca Groen and Caroline Cole. Season 2, Episode 5 covers Casa by the Sea and High Impact specifically, featuring survivor testimony from Chelsea Filer. The show traces the WWASP network across its multiple international programs. A starting point for advocates who want to explain WWASP's history to a general audience.

The Sunshine Place
Multi-season series on Straight Inc.

Season 2 covers Straight, Inc. in depth, one of the most extensively documented abusive programs in TTI history and the direct antecedent to many WWASP programs. Covers Straight's national network, its collapse in 1993, and the ongoing effort by survivors to hold its founders accountable. Critical for understanding the historical origin of the behavior modification model.

Casefile: Aaron Bacon
Casefile True Crime · Case 296

The Casefile podcast's episode on Aaron Bacon's 1994 death at North Star Expeditions is one of the most thorough audio accounts of how wilderness program medical neglect works and why it goes unpunished. Accessible for audiences not already familiar with the TTI, and widely shared in survivor communities as a tool for explaining the issue to skeptical family members.

Joe Rogan Experience (Guest: Unknown)
JRE · CEDU School Survivor

Joe Rogan has featured at least one guest who attended a CEDU-affiliated school and described the experience in detail. The episode reached a mainstream, skeptical audience that might not otherwise engage with TTI content, demonstrating how survivor testimony on large platforms can shift public awareness beyond the advocacy community.

Cult Vault
Episode on the Troubled Teen Industry

The Cult Vault podcast's episode on the TTI approaches the industry through the lens of cultic group dynamics, tracing the ideological origins in Synanon and documenting how classic cult techniques including thought reform, confession sessions, and isolation from family are used systematically across unaffiliated programs. A useful explainer for audiences approaching the issue from cult awareness rather than child welfare.

Watch

YouTube Videos

From congressional testimony to investigative news reports to survivor accounts. The featured embeds are the most important starting points. The list below covers the full range, from news segments to documentary shorts to historical survivor advocacy footage.

News and Investigative Reports

Advocacy and Survivor Stories

Documentaries and Deep Dives

History and Analysis

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