The Best TV Shows on AMI-tv

Every AMI-tv Show Ranked From Best To Worst

Showcasing over 5 shows from 2017 up until 2025, AMI-tv stands as a beacon of television excellence. For top-tier entertainment, AMI-tv delivered Employable Me and Heavy Lifting in 2017 and 2017. Explore our list of the top rated shows up to date from October 2025 that includes over 5 unique series.

  • Employable Me
    Employable Me (2017)N/A

    A moving documentary series featuring job seekers who are determined to show that having a physical disability or neurological condition shouldn’t make them unemployable.

  • Heavy Lifting
    Heavy Lifting (2017)N/A

    The intense lives of mobile crane operators as they make their living performing precision lifts. Day in and day out, these operators hoist massive loads and one mistake could be deadly. lt takes precision, control and single-minded focus. And each job presents unique dangers and challenges which these operators must deal with on the fly. No two lifts are ever the same.

  • Human +  The Future of Our Senses
    Human + The Future of Our Senses (2019)N/A

    Scientists, researchers, and entrepreneurs are revolutionizing the way people see, touch, taste, hear, and smell with cutting-edge advances in technology.

  • What Happened to Holly Bartlett
    What Happened to Holly Bartlett (2019)N/A

    Holly Bartlett, a 31-year-old Dalhousie University graduate student who was blind, was found unconscious under the MacKay Bridge in Halifax, Nova Scotia, early one morning in March of 2010. She died in hospital the next day from injuries identified as blunt force trauma, and hypothermia. While local authorities determined Holly's death was accidental, stating she simply became disoriented and fell, there remains several unanswered questions, compelling evidence, and more than one theory about how she may have died.

  • Underdog Inc.
    Underdog Inc. (2025)N/A

    Underdog Inc. is an adrenaline-fueled docuseries following Dale Kristensen—heavy-machinery operator, truck driver and mechanic—who stands just four-foot-two but takes on jobs built for giants.