Illustration of a skull wearing a blue cap and sunglasses, sitting in a wheelchair and holding a microphone, styled in bold blue and black colours.”

What the Hell is The Crip Tonight?

Let’s be clear from the start

  • This isn’t a charity.
  • This isn’t a corporate accessibility blog.
  • And this definitely isn’t here to quietly suggest improvements.

The Crip Tonight exists to call out where the system fails disabled people — properly, publicly, and with evidence.

Why this exists

If you’re disabled, you’ve probably been told:

  • “That’s just how the system works”
  • “There’s nothing we can do”
  • “You’ll have to wait”

Meanwhile:

  • support gets delayed
  • access gets ignored
  • and decisions get made without the people they affect

At some point, you realise:

It’s not one-off problems. It’s how the system is built.

What this platform will do

The Crip Tonight is here to:

  • Expose bad practice when it happens
  • Break down systems so people actually understand them
  • Use FOIs and evidence to back up what’s being said
  • Give space to real experiences that don’t usually get heard

No spin. No filtering. No pretending things are fine when they’re not.

What you’ll see here

Investigations

Real situations, properly looked at.

FOI findings

What organisations say publicly versus what’s actually happening.

Straight explanations

Because most systems rely on people not understanding them.

Lived experience

Not as a side note, but as core evidence.

Who this is for

  • Disabled people navigating systems that don’t work
  • Young people trying to understand what’s ahead of them
  • People working inside these systems who know things aren’t right
  • Anyone who’s had enough of things being brushed off

The tone

You won’t find:

  • vague statements
  • PR language
  • or “lessons will be learned”

You will find:

  • direct answers
  • evidence-backed content
  • and a willingness to say this isn’t good enough

This is more than a website

This is the start of:

  • a platform
  • a community
  • and something that can actually push back

Because the current approach isn’t working.

What happens next

This is just the starting point.

Next:

  • real investigations
  • FOI-led content
  • and breaking down systems that most people never get to see clearly

Get involved

If you’ve got:

  • an experience
  • something that doesn’t sit right
  • or a system that needs looking at

This is where it starts getting heard.

News@TheCripTonight.com

Illustration of a skull wearing a blue cap and sunglasses, sitting in a wheelchair and holding a microphone, styled in bold blue and black colours.”