Dicapta logo with the tagline - Accessible Communication Developers.

Text: Dicapta. Disabilities Collaborative Organization, Bringing access Through the Power of Technology for All. Background image: A family watches TV and laughs.
 

Six hands hold a word balloon that says accessible

17

Years of
Experience

 

Mission

By developing accessible communications for everyone regardless of their abilities, Dicapta focuses on making sure that media, entertainment, and culture are widely available and accessible for people with sensory disabilities, as well as for Latinos living in the U.S.

 

 

 
 

4000+ Hours

ACCESSIBILITY ASSETS PRODUCED

Emerging Technologies

DEVELOPMENT

1000+

BENEFICIARIES SATISFIED

 

Our Exceptional Work

 

 

Accessibility

Technology

Media Services

 
 

Why Choose Dicapta ?

I enjoy watching movies dubbed to my language because I can understand them better than in the original language.

Ariana Mariño,
8 years-old girl

 
 

Our Collaborators


We work together respecting our diverse cultural backgrounds, opinions, and beliefs, with the common goal of leading the efforts for an inclusive world.

 

Juanita Rodriguez

Juanita
Rodriguez

Adriana Casas

Adriana
Casas

Daniel Strauss

Daniel
Strauss

Sergio Carrasquilla

Sergio
Carrasquilla

 

Our Latest Newsletters

 

The Documentary I Didn't See You There Will Be Released With Accessibility Features

 

the shadow of a man on a wheelchair projects on a crosswalk

The final movie of POV’s Season 33 cycle is finally here! It has been a long journey, that began in July of last year with Wuhan Wuhan, and that will close with the spectacular I Didn’t See You There on January 16 of this year. 

I Didn’t See You There is an autobiographical movie by Reid Davenport, a disabled man with cerebral palsy, that begins a journey into freakdom and invisibility when a circus tent goes up outside his Oakland apartment. 

Filmed through the lenses of a man that is wheelchair-bound, I Didn’t See You There provides important insights into the nature of disability, and how the world in large is built without people with disabilities in mind. Reid faces problems that several of us will never have to think about, but at the same time he sees things in the world through his perspective that are unique. 

The film won the U.S. Documentary Director Prize at Sundance in 2022, and was a Grand Jury Prize nominee at the same event.

Produced by American Documentary, POV is the longest-running independent documentary screening on American television. The award-winning anthology series features fourteen feature films this season with themes including environmental justice, systemic inequity, global perspectives on motherhood, and caregiving during multiple crises.

The audio description of the POV season 35 documentaries is available thanks to the work of Dicapta and is sponsored by the US Department of Education, under project H327C210001 "Improved Access to Video for Students with Sensory Impairments through emerging technology - EnhAccess".

 

 

 

 

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