I'm kind of so-so on this. On one hand, it's good and all, but on the other it's kinda tacky in that they really aren't experiencing what it's like.
A day in the life of doesn't really cut it.
I worked in Atlanta for a year for a non-profit. Unrelated to homelessness, but we had to do some stuff before working with our non-profit agencies.
In general you have some good people. Most who don't take money because of the shame they feel. Most have family that could help them too, but don't because they say they'd either plunge right back or in most cases, their families don't even know their situation. The other side of it is just how many have severe psychological issues they don't want anyone knowing about.
Controlled environments like this also don't show the darker side where you can get shivved for your cheap blanket, your garbage, food. Anything. Plenty of them are actually some pretty scary bad people.
But at the same time, the ones who actually make it into night shelters are really good people who are really gracious for anything they get, even the small shit we take for granted. Sometimes you'll see others giving up their meager food for someone that needs it even more.
The ATL PD/City are also complete assholes in general to the homeless. A lot move down to the south to big cities like Hotlanta because of the super mild winters. Thing is, the tunnels and bridges they sleep under, the city/cops will keep the lights turned on and super bright to deter them away from any kind of sleep. And they've been known to do worse. And since most in ATL are African American, well.....you see where I'm going with this.