Invisible People

Invisible People Changing the story on homelessness through storytelling, education, news, and activism. But one a day kid handed the man a Christian pamphlet. You can see me?

The Invisible People story begins with its Founder, Mark Horvath:

"I once heard a story about a homeless man on Hollywood Blvd who really thought he was invisible. The homeless guy was shocked and amazed, 'what! How can you see me? I’m invisible!'

It isn’t hard to comprehend this man’s slow spiral into invisibility. Once on the street, people started to walk past him, ignoring him as if he didn’

t exist… much like they do a piece of trash on the sidewalk. It’s not that people are bad, but if we make eye contact, or engage in conversation, then we have to admit they exist and that we might have a basic human need to care. But it’s so much easier to simply close our eyes and and shield our hearts to their existence. I not only feel their pain, I truly know their pain. I lived their pain. You’d never know it now but I was a homeless person. Sixteen years ago, I lived on Hollywood Blvd. But today, I find myself looking away, ignoring the faces, avoiding their eyes — and I’m ashamed when I realize I’m doing it. But I really can feel their pain, and it is almost unbearable, but it’s just under the surface of my professional exterior." For years I’ve used the lens of a television camera to tell the stories of homelessness and the organizations trying to help. That was part of my job. The reports were produced well and told a story, but the stories you see on this site are much different. These are the real people, telling their own, very real stories… unedited, uncensored and raw. The purpose of Invisible People is to make the invisible visible. I hope these people and their stories connect with you and don’t let go. I hope their conversations with me will start a conversation in your circle of friends. After you get to know someone by watching their story, please pause for a few moments and write your thoughts. By keeping this dialogue open we can help a forgotten people. The invisible guy didn’t intend to become homeless. I didn’t plan on living on the street. Everyone on on the streets has their own story, some made bad decisions, others were victims, but none of them deserve what they have been left with, and it is a reflection of our own society that we just leave them there. Please always remember, the homeless people you’ll ignore today were much like you not so long ago."

05/31/2026

A Homeless Mother Fighting for Families in Crisis

05/31/2026

You could be an overweight, smoking jerk who once killed someone having your fourth heart attack, and you would still be a priority for medical care. No questions asked.

That is how defines what real service looks like. And it is a standard we have never applied to people experiencing homelessness.

We tell people to get clean before we house them. We make them prove they deserve help. We treat compassion like something that has to be earned. And then we wonder why the crisis never gets better.

Iain says our capacity to serve has to be rooted in radical acceptance. Not conditional love. Not earned compassion. Radical acceptance. Because if we truly believe that every person’s life is as valuable as our own, then this work is never a relationship between healer and wounded. It is a relationship between equals.

Our unhoused neighbors do not need to change who they are before we give them what they need. They need us to show up fully, fight harder, and demand systems that lead with humanity instead of conditions.

We all must advocate. We all must fight. We all must take tangible action to fix the affordable housing crisis and end homelessness.

📺 Watch the full episode on Invisible People’s YouTube channel or 🎧 listen wherever you get your audio podcasts

05/31/2026

Sharon has been sleeping rough in Central London for far too long.

05/30/2026

They’ve Tried Treatment. Over and Over. Harm Reduction Keeps Them Alive.

AJ has been to treatment over ten times. Detox, rehab, over and over, multiple times in a single year. He first went when he was 18. He kept going back.

That’s not weakness. That’s what addiction actually looks like. It’s not a switch you can flip. It doesn’t respond to willpower alone or the right program at the right moment. And yet the loudest political voices right now are pushing for forced treatment, an approach the evidence shows does not produce the outcomes we need.

Treatment matters. Recovery is possible. But treatment fails more than it works, and there are not enough beds for the people who want help today. Forcing someone into a program they aren’t ready for, or into a system that has already failed them multiple times, is not compassion. It’s politics.

What actually keeps people alive while they find their way? Harm reduction. A place where someone can use safely, stay connected to other human beings, and not die alone. Because dead addicts don’t recover.

If you want to see real change, support and advocate for harm reduction. It saves lives. It saves taxpayer money. And it opens the door to treatment in a way that nothing else does.

Search “Inside America’s First Legal Drug Use Site - Onpoint NYC” on YouTube or Google to watch the full documentary.

05/30/2026

A Senior Woman’s Fight to Survive Homelessness

05/30/2026

Invisible People Featured on The Ricki Lake Show Back in the Golden Age of Social Media

Back when social media still had magic, Invisible People was featured on The Ricki Lake Show. Claire Diaz-Ortiz, Head of Social Innovation at Twitter and author of “Twitter for Good,” featured our work in her book and the show brought her in to talk about it. Using social media to humanize homeless people and tell their stories was groundbreaking at the time, and it was working. A farmer donated 40 acres of land to feed the community and a mayor started a housing program. Social media used to change lives. Those days felt different.

05/30/2026

Homeless Man Breaks Down After Losing His Dog

05/29/2026

Kicked Out At 16, Now Living In The Streets Of Washington DC

Coerced treatment without medication increases overdose deaths and it costs more than housing people directly. So why ar...
05/29/2026

Coerced treatment without medication increases overdose deaths and it costs more than housing people directly. So why are lawmakers doubling down on it?

Mounting evidence shows that punitive, coercive approaches to homeless addiction fail to reduce drug use and worsen housing instability.

05/29/2026

As homelessness continues to rise in Utah, state lawmakers are proposing a massive new homelessness campus centered around what they call “accountability.” But new research is raising questions about whether the plan will actually address the problem.

Today in Invisible People’s Homelessness News: Week of May 25, 2026. Hosted by For more, visit us online and sign up for our bi-weekly email.

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