PASADENA, Calif. — Now that the sitcom she’s writing has moved from NBC to Netflix, Tina Fey has big plans: “Season two is going to be mostly shower sex.”

Jokes aside, the journey of “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” is a unique one for television and its future will be watched closely. The series, starring Ellie Kemper and Jane Krakowski, will see its first 13 episodes drop on Netflix on March 6.

Tina Fey and her creative partner Robert Carlock are behind the series, in which Kemper plays a woman who emerges from living in a cult for 15 years and starts over in New York City.

Originally targeted for NBC, half of the first season had been filmed and edited when NBC’s bosses — mindful of the difficulty broadcast networks have had lately creating new comedy hits — freed Fey and Carlock to shop the series elsewhere.

No hard feelings, Fey said. She’s co-hosting the Golden Globes on NBC tonight at 8 with pal Amy Poehler and said she won’t hesitate to again make something for NBC, where her “30 Rock” was a cult favorite.

“Because the show is made by NBC, it’s really in NBC’s best (financial) interests to find it the best home,” she said.

The comedy could have worked on NBC, “but I actually think more people will find us” on Netflix, Fey said.

The creators knew the series was moving to Netflix in time to edit the last half of the season, which enabled them to extend the episodes slightly beyond the 22-minute standard broadcast sitcom fare.

Moving forward, since Netflix has already committed to a second season, the creators are debating how the new venue will change what they do. For instance, will the actors be permitted to use rawer language?

“We will have to find our own boundaries next year,” Carlock said. “The theme of the show is set so I don’t think it will be a drastic shift.”

One thing Fey’s happy about in moving to Netflix: no snipes, the term for promotions that often pop up onscreen.

“I love Debra Messing, but we won’t see her face” on “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” hawking her NBC show, Fey said. Netflix announces premiere dates for ‘Daredevil,’ ‘Grace and Frankie,’ others

Netflix may have made a big splash a couple of years ago with shows like “House of Cards” and “Orange Is the New Black,” but the Los Gatos-based company is only getting started.

Ted Sarandos, chief content officer for Netflix, told journalists at the Television Critics Association Press Tour last week that the streaming service will offer 320 hours of original programming this year, including dramas, sitcoms, children’s shows, documentaries and movies.

— “House of Cards,” the political thriller that put Netflix on the original-programming map, returns for its third season on Feb. 27. It will be followed by several new series, including:

— “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” (March 6): A sitcom from Tina Fey and Robert Carlock (“30 Rock”) starring Ellie Kemper as a naive young woman, who after escaping a doomsday cult, tries to reclaim her life in New York City.

— “Bloodline” (March 20): A family drama-thriller set in the Florida Keys and starring Kyle Chandler, Sam Shepard and Sissy Spacek. It explores what happens when the black sheep of the family returns home.

— “Marvel’s Daredevil” (April 10): The first comic book-inspired drama from Netflix. It stars Charlie Cox as Matt Murdock, a blind man who fights injustice by day as a lawyer, and by night as a superhero.

— “Grace and Frankie” (May 8): An “irreverent and touching” series starring Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin as a pair of frenemies whose lives are turned upside down when their husbands leave them for each other.

In other Netflix news, Sarandos announced that the company has renewed the historical action-drama “Marco Polo” for a 10-episode second season. He also said that he is “optimistic” that Netflix will be able to produce another season of the sitcom “Arrested Development.”

The major hurdle for “Arrested Development,” he said, is the busy schedules of the principals involved.

“We’re trying to make it happen in a way that works for everyone,” he said.

On the children’s programming front, Netflix will debut “The Adventures of Puss in Boots” on Jan. 16. It’s an animated series featuring the breakout character from the “Shrek” franchise.

— DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA