It would do the primitives well to spend some time studying
A Rake's Progress, by William Hogarth. While the life of the primary subject of Hogath's paintings, Tom Rakewell, closely mirrors many aspects of the primitive's lives throughout all eight paintings, for the purposes of my post, only the eighth and final painting is of interest:
While some of the details in these pictures may appear disturbing to modern eyes, they were commonplace in Hogarth's day. For example, the fashionably dressed women in this last painting have come to the asylum as a social occasion, to be entertained by the bizarre antics of the inmates.
We're just carrying on an age-old tradition here, primitives. Only the location of the asylums have changed in modern times.