After a reportedly record-breaking production deal with Netflix, producer and showrunner Ryan Murphy has apparently been hard at work. The most recent announcement is a new show called Hollywood, which he says will focus on the Golden Era of movies. It’s the third Murphy show to air on Netflix and the first that will actually be produced by Netflix.

The other shows that have been announced thus far are The Politician starring Broadway star Ben Platt and Ratched, starring Murphy regular Sarah Paulson. Ratched in particular has been lining up an all-star cast. The prequel to One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – apparently an origin story for the villainous Nurse Ratched – will also star Sharon Stone, Cynthia Nixon, and Rosanna Arquette.

Meanwhile, back at his old stomping grounds at FX network, American Horror Story will continue on indefinitely despite Murphy’s deal with Netflix. American Crime Story will reportedly continue as well, but the previously announced season covering Hurricane Katrina is apparently dead. Feud was also meant to continue but seems to have petered out, not because of any feud (see what I did there) with FX or its parent company Disney but just because they didn’t have any new ideas to fit the theme.

Murphy is no doubt under a lot of pressure to really deliver for Netflix after the massive amount of money they’re paying him. But he’s shown consistency in the past, with a number of shows that have been successful or award-winning (never both at the same time, it seems). Glee for Fox and American Horror Story for FX were both massive hits. American Crime Story nearly swept the Golden Globes and Emmys for mini-series for both the first season about O.J. Simpson and the second season about Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace’s murderer. The mini-series he produced for HBO A Normal Heart about AIDS-era activists similarly was a critical success.