​BBC America’s President and GM Sarah Barnett puts her faith in the network’s scripted originals, she said at the TCA summer press tour on Friday morning.

BBC America announced two new scripted projects in its co-production pact with AMC, as well as an entire slate of new originals from well-known filmmakers and creators.

Undercover and Thirteen will both come to BBC America in 2016, joining a slate that includes the acclaimed Doctor Who, Luther and Orphan Black. Undercover, from writer Peter Moffat, is a political thriller about the first black woman in England to hold the highest ranking public prosecutor role. Thirteen is a new mystery from Marnie Dickens following a young girl who escapes the cell she has been trapped in for the past 13 years.

“The scripted TV explosion in recent years has affirmed over and over that strong visionaries are the heart of creative and commercial success,” said Barnett in a statement. “At BBC America we’re doubling down on extraordinary creator-led projects.”

Other new series in the works are Dirk Gently, an adaptation of a comic by Douglas Adams (Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy), a Tokyo adventure series called Moths, The Greater Good from Murderball filmmaker Dana Shapiro, which is about the Jonestown massacre; an untitled 1950s thriller from Anders August, and a family drama from Anna Winger.

Friday afternoon, Starz CEO Chris Albrecht announced plans to premiere entire seasons at once for the series debut of Flesh and Bone as well as the final season of Da Vinci’s Demons. Both series will be able to binge on their premiere dates (Flesh and Bone on Nov. 8 and Da Vinci’s Demons Oct. 24) on Starz Play and Starz On Demand. David Baldwin, Starz EVP of program planning, called it a “binge viewing experiment” for the series.

Starz also renewed its pirate drama Black Sails for a fourth season, and unveiled plans for Havana Quartet with Antonio Banderas. Havana Quartet is based on a detective book series by Leonardo Padura.

“Starz continues to see great opportunity in continued programming diversification with many communities and genres,” said Starz CEO Chris Albrecht in a statement. “Partnering with eOne to develop the drama series Havana Quartet with international star Antonio Banderas will allow us to give viewers a premium show that highlights the decaying beauty of Cuba during its ‘Special Period’ — a time and place which tourists rarely got to experience.”

Havana Quartet would join a lineup at Starz that includes Outlander, Ash vs. Evil Dead, Power, Survivor’s Remorse, Blunt Talk and the upcoming adaptation American Gods.

AMC announced its fall schedule at its presentation, with The Walking Dead helping to launch new martial arts series Into the Badlands in November.

Fear the Walking Dead will debut later this month, and AMC confirmed it has been picked up for a second season. The Making the Mob will also get a season two, this time set in Chicago premiering next year.

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