Find Out When All Of Netflix’s New Shows Are Premiering

Netflix content chief Ted Sarandos just announced to the Television Critics Association release dates for the service’s anticipated new original series lineup. The release dates are as follows:

March 6

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt — Ellie Kemper (The Office, Bridesmaids) will star as Kimmy Schmidt, former cult member taking on the big city in Tina Fey’s new comedy series.

March 20

Bloodline — Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights), Linda Cardellini (Freaks and Geeks), and Ben Mendelsohn (Starred Up, Girls) star in this family drama from the creator of Glenn Close’s political drama Damages.

April 10

Daredevil — Charlie Cox is Matt Murdock: lawyer by day, superhero by night. Marvel fans rejoice.

May 8

Grace and Frankie — Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin star as a pair of professional frenemies whose husbands leave them for each other.

Renewals:

Marco PoloNetflix’s mixed-reviewed attempt to rival Game of Thrones has been renewed for a second season.

Possibilities:

Other Netflix Originals due out in 2015 (but don’t have release dates yet):

“F” Is For Family — A half-hour comedy series created by comedian Bill Burr.

Marseille — A French drama that’s gritty and scandalous like House of Cards.

Marvel’s A.K.A. Jessica Jones — Krysten Ritter (Don’t Trust the B—, Breaking Bad) stars in this action-adventure drama.

Narcos — A drug cartel epic starring Game of Thrones’ Pedro Pascal.

Sense 8 — A trippy sci-fi series from The Wachowskis starring Naveen Andrews and Daryl Hannah.

In addition to the news, Sarandos shared some consumer information about Netflix streaming habits, which might be a bit different from what you’d expect. According to Sarandos, users “typically watch 2-3 episodes at a time,” so perhaps we’re not bingeing as much as we think. Sticking to their secretive ways, Sarandos shooed away any questions of ratings as they “have no reflection on our business in any way.” He did sympathize a bit, however, and went on to say, “I know it frustrates you, but we’re going to stay away from it as long as we can.” Different from TV, Sarandos informed TCA that Netflix measures success based on subscription renewals and subscriber growth, not ratings. According to Variety, there was no mention of how multiple profiles and password sharing effects the streaming giant’s ratings or data.

 

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Photos: Netflix PR