Red hot alert for all 90s kids: Kenan Thompson is going back to his All That roots. Cue the music! The Saturday Night Live star is teaming up with digital start-up pocket.watch and old Nickelodeon collaborator to create a sketch comedy series for kids.

In the series, titled Pocket.watch Presents Skoogle (not a very snappy title, but hey, things could change), Thompson will voice the role of “an Alexa-like digital assistant for kids who has been created to help kids with their daily problems,” according to Variety. The show will pair Thompson up with pocket.watch chief content officer Albie Hecht, the former Nickelodeon president who was also one of the development execs behind All That, the seminal children’s sketch series that gave Thompson his start in the industry.

“Having been a part of sketch-comedy shows throughout my career, I’m thrilled to be able to introduce the show format that I love to an entirely new generation of kids,” Thompson said in a statement, per Variety.

The series will have 10 to 13 episodes and will be geared to kids aged 6 through 11. Pocket.watch plans to start production in the fall, then shop the show around to potential networks or streaming platforms. Skoogle will also be filmed in front of a live studio audience, further giving it that classic All That vibe.

Since 2003, Thompson has starred on S.N.L., only occasionally venturing out to guest star on other projects like Maya & Marty and Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt. Skoogle will be the first series he has created and produced from the ground up; perhaps it’s an indication that Thompson is ready to spread his wings beyond 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Considering his lengthy tenure at the sketch show—he’s tied with Darrell Hammond for the cast member who’s been on S.N.L. the longest, at 14 seasons apiece, and will break that tie if and when he returns this fall for his fifteenth—it’s clear that the comedian is more than comfortable at his current gig. And so is S.N.L. boss Lorne Michaels, who told HuffPost earlier this year that he dreads the day Thompson decides to leave. “I would have him back for the next 20 years if I could figure out a way to keep him,” Michaels said. If Skoogle does take off, though, it could pave the way for Thompson to finally branch off and pursue other comedic endeavors.

Of course, plenty of his co-stars have managed to stay on the legendary sketch series while also engaging in other time-consuming pursuits. Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones became Ghostbusters and lined up a number of other plum roles without disrupting their time on Saturday Night Live, while Kyle Mooney co-wrote and stars in the warmly received indie Brigsby Bear. Meanwhile, Aidy Bryant continues to pop up in all things critically adored, like Girls and The Big Sick.

Out of all these cast members, though, it’s Thompson who seems particularly primed to step away and dig into something fresh. Maybe it’s time to take all that knowledge he’s learned from Michaels and help groom the next generation of future comedians.