In 2017, Netflix will continue to ramp up the amount of original shows it's putting out.
Netflix has said it will release a whopping 1,000 hours of original shows and movies in 2017 (and spend $6 billion to do so). That's up from 600 hours in 2016, and means you'd have to spend 41 days binge-watching Netflix to see it all.
41 days!
But what is Netflix actually putting out in 2017?
It's February, so the streaming giant has released a few things already, including a strange cannibal comedy starring Drew Barrymore. But Netflix has a lot more in the pipeline, from the return of hits like "Stranger Things" and "House of Cards," to new shows featuring stars like Naomi Watts or Kathy Bates, to reboots of classics like "Mystery Science Theater 3000."
To help you keep track, we've put together a list of shows Netflix has confirmed — for certain — are coming out in 2017. This excludes movies and kids' shows, and things that might not come out until 2018 and beyond.
Here are the 25 shows we know for sure Netflix is putting out in 2017:
'Ultimate Beastmaster' (Season 1) — February 24

Netflix description:"Each hour-long episode will feature 12 competitors, two from each country, who will take their shot at running one of the most physically demanding obstacle courses ever devised, 'The Beast.' At the end of each episode, a ‘Beastmaster’ will be crowned and in the final episode of the season, the nine individual winners from each episode will compete against each other for the chance for one contestant to become the Ultimate Beastmaster."
'Marvel's Iron Fist' (Season 1) — March 17

Netflix description:"Billionaire Danny Rand (Finn Jones) returns to New York City after being missing for years, trying to reconnect with his past and his family legacy. He fights against the criminal element corrupting New York City with his kung-fu mastery and ability to summon the awesome power of the fiery IronFist."
'Samurai Gourmet' (Season 1) — March 17

Netflix description:"The live action series 'Samurai Gourmet,' based on Masayuki Kusumi’s essay and the manga of the same title, featuring the life of Takeshi Kasumi.
Takeshi Kasumi has spent his entire life devoted to his job. Now a retired man, he finds himself with plenty of extra time on his hands. While on an afternoon walk, Kasumi discovers the joys of day time drinking and the realization that he is now free to eat and drink what he wants, when he wants. This awakens his inner persona — a wandering samurai living life freely in Japan’s age of civil wars. Thus begins his search for blissfully delectable delights to satisfy his stomach and the samurai’s soul."
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