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- In a show of confidence, Netflix greenlights another season of prison dramedy "Orange Is the New Black" before subscribers have seen it. June 28, 2013 5:19 AM PDT Actress Taylor Schilling gets booked as her character Piper Chapman in a screenshot from the trailer for Netflix's next original series "Orange Is the New Black." (Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET) Netflix's next original series to premiere, "Orange Is the New Black," is already set to come back next year before the company's subscribers have a chance to see the first go-round. The renewal of the show, which is about a woman who must put her comfortable New York life on hold to serve a 15-month prison sentence, is clearly a display of confidence in the program, but it's not unprecedented. Netflix ordered two seasons of "House of Cards" sight unseen, before it had any assurances it would become the home run that it did. But "Orange Is the New Black" and "House of Cards" are in the same sweet spot. Both fit the mold of HBO or Showtime programming, which buttresses Netflix's goal to grow beyond a catalog of older movies and television shows into a must-visit destination for the stuff of water cooler chatter that ultimately drives subscriptions. The coming program also gets its bona fides in that realm from creator and executive producer Jenji Kohan, the creator Showtime's hit "Weeds." Original shows and films are the rage now, with tech outfits spanning Amazon, Microsoft's Halo franchise and AOL investing in exclusive programs. The company's head of content, Ted Sarandos, has said the budget for original programming will as much as triple over the next couple years, from less than 5 percent of the total content budget now. Related stories The unlikely group putting the kibosh on cable TV: Parents Netflix's blink-and-you-missed-it 'Hemlock Grove' to return Netflix streaming heads to the Netherlands in late 2013 Questions persist about NSA surveillance Cheap sitter? Netflix lines up 300 hours of DreamWorks TV Of its homegrown series the public has already seen, "Arrested Development" is the only one without the go-ahead for an encore. Last week, Netflix ordered up a second season of horror thriller "Hemlock Grove." And "Lilyhammer," about a New York gangster starting over in Norway, has a return season in production. The most high-profile of Netflix's programming endeavors after "House of Cards," , though the Hurculean effort it took to produce the new episodes of the dark comedy are likely the larger factor, as Netflix has heralded the show's reception. Netflix has a couple other original shows on its marquee for the back half of the year: "Derek," a comedic look at life in a senior center from Ricky Gervais and "Turbo: F.A.S.T.," a children's program in collaboration with DreamWorks Animation. Next year brings a science fiction thriller "Sense8" from the Wachowski siblings, who created the Matrix trilogy.
In a show of confidence, Netflix greenlights another season of prison dramedy "Orange Is the New Black" before subscribers have seen it. June 28, 2013 5:19 AM PDT Actress Taylor Schilling gets booked as her character Piper Chapman in a screenshot from the trailer for Netflix's next original series "Orange Is the New Black." (Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET) Netflix's next original series to premiere, "Orange Is the New Black," is already set to come back next year before the company's subscribers have a chance to see the first go-round. The renewal of the show, which is about a woman who must put her comfortable New York life on hold to serve a 15-month prison sentence, is clearly a display of confidence in the program, but it's not unprecedented. Netflix ordered two seasons of "House of Cards" sight unseen, before it had any assurances it would become the home run that it did. But "Orange Is the New Black" and "House of Cards" are in the same sweet spot. Both fit the mold of HBO or Showtime programming, which buttresses Netflix's goal to grow beyond a catalog of older movies and television shows into a must-visit destination for the stuff of water cooler chatter that ultimately drives subscriptions. The coming program also gets its bona fides in that realm from creator and executive producer Jenji Kohan, the creator Showtime's hit "Weeds." Original shows and films are the rage now, with tech outfits spanning Amazon, Microsoft's Halo franchise and AOL investing in exclusive programs. The company's head of content, Ted Sarandos, has said the budget for original programming will as much as triple over the next couple years, from less than 5 percent of the total content budget now. Related stories The unlikely group putting the kibosh on cable TV: Parents Netflix's blink-and-you-missed-it 'Hemlock Grove' to return Netflix streaming heads to the Netherlands in late 2013 Questions persist about NSA surveillance Cheap sitter? Netflix lines up 300 hours of DreamWorks TV Of its homegrown series the public has already seen, "Arrested Development" is the only one without the go-ahead for an encore. Last week, Netflix ordered up a second season of horror thriller "Hemlock Grove." And "Lilyhammer," about a New York gangster starting over in Norway, has a return season in production. The most high-profile of Netflix's programming endeavors after "House of Cards," , though the Hurculean effort it took to produce the new episodes of the dark comedy are likely the larger factor, as Netflix has heralded the show's reception. Netflix has a couple other original shows on its marquee for the back half of the year: "Derek," a comedic look at life in a senior center from Ricky Gervais and "Turbo: F.A.S.T.," a children's program in collaboration with DreamWorks Animation. Next year brings a science fiction thriller "Sense8" from the Wachowski siblings, who created the Matrix trilogy.
In a show of confidence, Netflix greenlights another season of prison dramedy "Orange Is the New Black" before subscribers have seen it.
Actress Taylor Schilling gets booked as her character Piper Chapman in a screenshot from the trailer for Netflix's next original series "Orange Is the New Black."
(Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET)
Netflix's next original series to premiere, "Orange Is the New Black," is already set to come back next year before the company's subscribers have a chance to see the first go-round.
The renewal of the show, which is about a woman who must put her comfortable New York life on hold to serve a 15-month prison sentence, is clearly a display of confidence in the program, but it's not unprecedented. Netflix ordered two seasons of "House of Cards" sight unseen, before it had any assurances it would become the home run that it did.
But "Orange Is the New Black" and "House of Cards" are in the same sweet spot. Both fit the mold of HBO or Showtime programming, which buttresses Netflix's goal to grow beyond a catalog of older movies and television shows into a must-visit destination for the stuff of water cooler chatter that ultimately drives subscriptions.
The coming program also gets its bona fides in that realm from creator and executive producer Jenji Kohan, the creator Showtime's hit "Weeds."
Original shows and films are the rage now, with tech outfits spanning Amazon, Microsoft's Halo franchise and AOL investing in exclusive programs.
The company's head of content, Ted Sarandos, has said the budget for original programming will as much as triple over the next couple years, from less than 5 percent of the total content budget now.
Related stories
- The unlikely group putting the kibosh on cable TV: Parents
- Netflix's blink-and-you-missed-it 'Hemlock Grove' to return
- Netflix streaming heads to the Netherlands in late 2013
- Questions persist about NSA surveillance
- Cheap sitter? Netflix lines up 300 hours of DreamWorks TV
Of its homegrown series the public has already seen, "Arrested Development" is the only one without the go-ahead for an encore. Last week, Netflix ordered up a second season of horror thriller "Hemlock Grove." And "Lilyhammer," about a New York gangster starting over in Norway, has a return season in production.
The most high-profile of Netflix's programming endeavors after "House of Cards," , though the Hurculean effort it took to produce the new episodes of the dark comedy are likely the larger factor, as Netflix has heralded the show's reception.
Netflix has a couple other original shows on its marquee for the back half of the year: "Derek," a comedic look at life in a senior center from Ricky Gervais and "Turbo: F.A.S.T.," a children's program in collaboration with DreamWorks Animation. Next year brings a science fiction thriller "Sense8" from the Wachowski siblings, who created the Matrix trilogy.