
From Savannah to National Spotlight: Ammie Dover and Rare Well Done
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From Savannah to National Spotlight: Ammie Dover and Rare Well Done
Every community has its rising stars, those people who emerge from among us, nurtured by local energy and spirit, and then lift off on wings of their own. In Savannah, that star is Ammie Dover. Her light is not just bright, it’s rare well done.
Meet Ammie Dover
Ammie is a caregiver, storyteller, and entrepreneur. She runs www.CaregivingInsider.com, a platform devoted to amplifying the voices and experiences of caregivers. Her journey has always been personal; rooted in care, compassion, and understanding but also bold. Ammie isn’t content to shine quietly; she’s aiming for something bigger.
Her caregiving journey began in a deeply personal way when Jose Rosa, her significant other and community leader, was diagnosed with Stage 4 Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Ammie stepped in as a caregiver, supporting him through grueling rounds of treatment, including chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. That experience forever shaped her perspective on what it means to give care, endure uncertainty, and find hope. More of this story can be found on www.TodaywithJose.com.
Rare Well Done: A New Show with National Audience
Ammie Dover is now the host of a new show called Rare Well Done, a project that’s getting national attention. It recently aired on the NBCUniversal channel CoziTV. Drawing from stories of families facing rare diseases, the show weaves together grief and hope, challenge and triumph, into narratives that are at once intimate and universal.
Her work has been featured on Today.com in an article that explores how rare disease families make room in their lives for joy—even in the most difficult moments. Though the idea of a show exploring rare diseases is not entirely new, Ammie’s approach stands out: she isn’t just chronicling struggle, she’s illuminating resilience. The Today piece highlights how these families carve out spaces of joy and meaning despite obstacles.
The show has a promising future: Rare Well Done is under consideration for a full 8-episode season in 2026, which would bring these stories to a far broader audience.
Why This Matters – Especially Locally
Here in Savannah, we see many people doing amazing work. What makes Ammie’s story so special is the bridge she is building—from local roots, through community, into national recognition. She reminds us of why local stories are powerful: because they carry authenticity, because caring for one another begins at home. She started with community, caregivers she knows, stories drawn from her own world. Now those stories may become part of the national conversation.
When someone from your own neighborhood is featured on Today.com, when someone you’ve maybe seen at a coffee shop or at the kid’s school is producing a show that might air across the country—it does more than bring pride. It reshapes what we believe is possible for us.
CaregivingInsider – Home Base, Heart, and Vision
At the center of Ammie’s mission is her platform, CaregivingInsider.com, a hub designed to give caregivers both encouragement and practical tools. Beyond heartfelt articles and personal reflections, the site offers free downloads created to ease the day‑to‑day challenges caregivers face—resources like checklists, guides, and supportive materials that provide clarity in overwhelming times.
Visitors will also find rare disease insights, caregiver stories, and a growing library of tools that help families feel less alone. Ammie built the site to be both a community and a lifeline—somewhere caregivers can go to find understanding, advice, and tangible help.
Her work demonstrates that “care” is a verb, not just a quiet role. It’s action. It’s storytelling. It’s connecting.
What’s Next: The Road to 2026
If Rare Well Done is picked up as an 8-episode season in 2026, we’ll see more than just stories. We’ll see representation. We’ll see rare disease, caregiving, and the joy and heartbreak of human experience being given space in living rooms, online platforms, and conversations that too often overlook these realities.
For Ammie, this means bigger production, broader distribution, more storytelling—but also more opportunity to uplift voices that often go unheard. For Savannah, it means rooting for one of our own while seeing our values—compassion, authenticity, perseverance—reflected on a national scale.
What Savannah Can Do
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Tune In: When Rare Well Done debuts, whether via streaming, broadcast, or another format, watch it. Share it.
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Support the Platform: CaregivingInsider.com can use support—whether through readership, sharing or partnership—to continue growing.
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Tell Your Story: This is a moment to believe that personal narratives, especially about care and illness, matter. If you or someone you know has a story, Ammie’s work shows that it has both value and power.
Final Thoughts
In Savannah, we love our underdogs, our quiet doers, the ones who don’t always seek the spotlight but carry the torch anyway. Ammie has always been one of those—until now. With Rare Well Done, she’s not only stepping into a larger stage; she’s bringing parts of Savannah with her. And for all of us living here, that’s something to celebrate.
National heights are impressive. But seeing a local reach them is special.


