Even months after it was first reported, details about Barack and Michelle Obama’s wide-ranging Netflix deal are still being held tightly under wraps. But questions have arisen. What kinds of projects will they make? Are the Obamas planning to star in any projects as well as produce them? And will the deal be an extension of their political work?

There is, at least, an answer to the last question: apparently not, according to Netflix head Ted Sarandos. During an interview at the Paley Center for Media on Tuesday, Sarandos shared a sliver of an update that indicated Democratic talking points will have no place in the former First Family’s Netflix projects.

“This is not the Obama Network,” Sarandos said, per Variety. “There’s no political slant to the programming.”

The Obamas have signed on to create a variety of potential projects that fall into entertainment programming, including scripted films and TV shows, unscripted lifestyle content, and docuseries, according to Variety. Per The New York Times, the Obamas also want to focus on sharing inspirational stories. Possible shows could include the former president moderating conversations on important topics like health care, voting rights, and immigration policy—though that idea seems a little too political, considering Sarandos’s latest revelation. Another possible idea, per the Times, is one in which the former First Lady chats about topics like nutrition, a key issue during her time in the White House. (This makes sense: Michelle is already good friends with Oprah, so now it’s time for her to become Oprah.)

They’ll also likely attach their powerful names to documentaries and fictional programs that line up with their beliefs—and Malia Obama, noted film buff and future auteur, is likely already claiming her corner of this Netflix deal accordingly, sketching up her dream projects from her Harvard dorm room.

When the Obamas formed their company, Higher Ground Productions, Sarandos shared that he was eager to bring them on board. “I didn’t want to see them go anywhere else, because I think they’ll be great at it,” he said. The Netflix chief also has a personal tie to the Obama family: his wife, Nicole Avant, served as the U.S. ambassador to the Bahamas during President Obama’s first term in office.

In the initial statement about the deal, released in late May, the former president said he and Michelle “hope to cultivate and curate the talented, inspiring, creative voices who are able to promote greater empathy and understanding between peoples, and help them share their stories with the entire world.” Michelle also added that they “have always believed in the power of storytelling to inspire us, to make us think differently about the world around us, and to help us open our minds and hearts to others.”