Conde Nast Entertainment showed its commitment to discovering and developing the next generation of filmmakers by expanding its premium digital video network through three new incubator programs.

At its Digital Content NewFronts presentation in New York, the studio also renewed 98 digital series—or 62 percent of its digital programming slate—for the 2016-2017 season.

In addition to video produced for digital platforms, Condé Nast Entertainment currently has five television series in production or launched, including Fashion Fund and The New Yorker Presents on Amazon Prime Video, as well as a first-look deal at 20th Century Fox Television for scripted programming.

New partnerships were also a focus of the presentation.

The studio revealed a distribution deal with Comcast to deliver content Xfinity VOD customers on Comcast’s Watchable online service, expanding Conde Nast’s distribution to more than 50 platforms.

It also announced a first of its kind partnership with Simple Reach on a new dashboard, set to launch in the fall, that will provide a lens into branded content video performance across every distribution outlet.

Finally, Conde Nast released the second iteration of its premium digital video platform, The Scene, as a mobile-first video network that currently features social capabilities and a new mobile app. The Scene includes new content from partnerships with the NBA, with which it will co-create multiple new lifestyle series, including one that gives audiences a rare look inside the lives of some of today’s most popular NBA players. The Scene also works with CNN’s Great Big Story, in addition to its 17 existing partners.

“We’ve been at the forefront of the digital video revolution since the beginning, and are pleased to announce the expansion of our network with significant developments in content, distribution, data capabilities and measurement,” said Dawn Ostroff, president, Condé Nast Entertainment.

“Our company has a tradition of working with the best and discovering the next, and we’re looking forward to finding and nurturing the next great storytelling talent. Today, through cutting-edge partnerships and content innovation, our high-powered video network produces more than 4,000 videos annually, and we’re programming to the next generation of audiences in compelling and resonant ways across every platform that matters.”

Incubator Programs

Conde Nast’s three new incubator programs are designed to support the next generation of digital video storytellers.

Project: Her

This project focuses exclusively on female filmmakers and their mentors, who will include Lesli Linka Glatter (Homeland), Mimi Leder (The Leftovers), Betty Thomas (Private Parts), Sarah Treem (The Affair) and Kasi Lemmons (Eve’s Bayou). The program will follow their journeys together through social videos and culminate in the finished project premiering on CNÉ’s digital video network. It is in partnership with Indigenous Media and acclaimed filmmakers Jon Avnet, Rodrigo Garcia and Jake Avnet.

Big Script

This film incubator pairs young filmmakers with the industry’s hottest scripts and scales them down into short films to be distributed on CNÉ’s network. Big Script is also in partnership with Indigenous Media, actor/producer Josh Hutcherson (Hunger Games) and Michelle Hutcherson’s Turkeyfoot Productions.

Creators in Residence

Aimed at today’s millennial filmmakers, this program will help them develop and produce content outside of the traditional system. First up is the scripted comedy series, That’s What She Said, executive produced and created by Samantha Ressler (This Is The End, Modern Family) and directed by Matt Spicer. Ressler also co-stars with Nathalie Love (Elvis and Nixon).

“We reach 70 percent of cultured millennials in the U.S. who respond to our content everyday,” said Lisa Valentino, CNÉ chief revenue officer and senior vice president of network sales for Condé Nast. “It’s that storytelling expertise coupled with our deep data capabilities that allows us to offer advertisers innovative programs in elevated and creative environments that they can’t find anywhere else.”

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