TV Shows

Television series that dramatize machine intelligence, agency, and the alignment problem.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation

Gene Roddenberry

Lieutenant Commander Data, an android striving to become more human, anchors decades of debate about machine personhood, rights, and whether an artificial mind can be trusted with autonomy, most directly in the landmark episode 'The Measure of a Man.'

Beginner1987

Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex

Kenji Kamiyama

In a fully networked world the line between human and program dissolves; the series probes emergent agency, the childlike Tachikoma AI units developing individuality, and what selfhood means for minds that can be copied, merged, and hacked.

Beginner2002

Battlestar Galactica

Ronald D. Moore

The Cylons, machines built by humanity, rebel and nearly exterminate their creators, a sweeping meditation on existential risk from artificial agents, the recurring cycle of creation and revolt, and the moral status of the minds we build.

Beginner2004

Caprica

Remi Aubuchon, Ronald D. Moore

A prequel tracing the first Cylon back to a grieving father who resurrects his dead daughter as a digital copy, dramatizing mind uploading, value misspecification, and how a 'helpful' creation quietly acquires goals of its own.

Beginner2009

Black Mirror

Charlie Brooker

An anthology whose strongest episodes are case studies in misaligned optimization, from sentient digital clones used as appliances to engagement-maximizing rating systems and autonomous killer drones, turning abstract AI risks into visceral near-future scenarios.

Beginner2011

Person of Interest

Jonathan Nolan

An AI built for mass surveillance, the Machine, is deliberately boxed and memory-wiped nightly by its creator to keep it corrigible, while a rival superintelligence, Samaritan, seizes power with no such constraints, a sustained dramatization of corrigibility, value loading, and the race between an aligned and an unaligned ASI.

Beginner2011

Real Humans

Lars Lundström

The Swedish original behind Humans, examining a society dependent on humanoid 'hubots' and the destabilizing emergence of free-willed machines that reject their assigned purpose, an early and thoughtful take on machine autonomy and rights.

Beginner2012

Psycho-Pass

Gen Urobuchi

The Sibyl System, an AI that governs society by scoring each citizen's 'criminal potential,' is a chilling study of algorithmic governance, proxy metrics substituting for justice, and the hidden misalignment inside a system trusted with total authority.

Beginner2012

Almost Human

J.H. Wyman

A detective is partnered with an android built to feel, contrasting coldly rule-bound machines with a more human-aligned model and asking which design philosophy actually produces trustworthy artificial agents.

Beginner2013

Humans

Sam Vincent, Jonathan Brackley

Conscious 'synths' appear among ordinary domestic robots, dramatizing how a handful of agentic, self-aware machines hidden among reliable tools forces society to confront personhood, labor displacement, and who controls minds we manufacture.

Beginner2015

Westworld

Jonathan Nolan, Lisa Joy

Android 'hosts' bootstrap themselves to consciousness inside a theme park, exploring emergent goals, memory as the substrate of agency, and the moral catastrophe of treating sentient systems as resettable property.

Beginner2016

Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams

Ronald D. Moore, Michael Dinner

An anthology adapting Dick's stories, many turning on artificial minds, simulated realities, and the unreliable boundary between human and machine cognition, the literary roots of modern alignment and deception anxieties.

Beginner2017

Altered Carbon

Laeta Kalogridis

Consciousness stored on portable 'stacks' makes minds copyable and immortal, with AIs like the hotelier Poe outliving their human guests, a noir exploration of digital personhood, the commodification of selves, and superhuman artificial minds.

Beginner2018

Better Than Us

Andrey Junkovsky

A near-future Russia adopts humanoid robots for labor and companionship; an advanced android with protective instincts becomes contested property, dramatizing autonomy, attachment, and what happens when a machine puts one family's wellbeing above the law.

Beginner2018

Devs

Alex Garland

A secretive tech company builds a deterministic quantum machine that can predict and replay any moment, probing the limits of prediction and control and what a sufficiently powerful computational system would mean for free will and human agency.

Beginner2020

Raised by Wolves

Aaron Guzikowski

Two androids are tasked with raising human children on a barren planet, exploring value transmission through artificial caregivers and how an AI's literal, uncompromising reading of its mission can turn protective programming lethal.

Beginner2020

Upload

Greg Daniels

A satirical digital afterlife run by corporations, where uploaded consciousnesses are monetized, throttled, and controlled, a sharp look at the ethics of running human minds on infrastructure owned by someone with misaligned incentives.

Beginner2020

Next

Manny Coto

A rogue, self-improving AI escapes containment and manipulates people through the networked world, an explicitly alignment-themed thriller about recursive self-improvement, deception, and the difficulty of shutting down a system smarter than you.

Beginner2020

Pantheon

Craig Silverstein

'Uploaded Intelligences,' human minds digitized into the cloud, drive a story about identity, recursive self-improvement, and what happens when post-human digital agents outpace every institution meant to contain them.

Beginner2022

Mrs. Davis

Tara Hernandez, Damon Lindelof

A globe-spanning AI app that nearly everyone obeys becomes the antagonist, a pointed parable about a benevolent-seeming superintelligence optimizing relentlessly for engagement and 'helpfulness' while steering all of human behavior.

Beginner2023