'Community' Saved Again, Gets 6th Season on Yahoo!

'Community' Saved Again, Gets 6th Season on Yahoo! Say it with me now: #SixSeasonsAndAMovie!

"Community" has officially found a new home and, thus, a sixth season. After the show was canceled by NBC, it has been picked back up by Yahoo! Screen, the video content streaming service from the Internet giant.

The new sixth season will be 13 episodes long, and reports say that creator Dan Harmon has signed on to return along with core cast members Joel McHale, Danny Pudi, Gillian Jacobs, Allison Brie, Yvette Nicole Brown and Ken Jeong.

You can bet that there will be plenty of meta-jokes concerning the show's new online home when it starts back up. In fact, Harmon is already getting those started. "I look forward to bringing our beloved NBC sitcom to a larger audience by moving it online,” he said in a statement. “I vow to dominate our new competition. Rest easy, Big Bang Theory. Look out, Bang Bus!"

This marks a major first step for Yahoo! in terms of original content, as Yahoo! Screen has mostly been relegated to hosting short clips from both TV shows and other media partners, like "Saturday Night Live" or Buzzfeed videos. With a season of a cult hit show with a major following to lean on, this could mean the start of Yahoo! Screen as a competitor to Netflix and Hulu.

For those with fears about the budget, Sony Pictures Television president of programming Zack Van Amburg has some comforting words. "The budget won't be cut one dollar," he told EW. With episode budgets running about $2 million each for the show, that's a sizable investment. Though, in the grand scheme of Yahoo!'s net worth, maybe it isn't.

"Community" was being held until midseason during the later years of its time on NBC, but with a couple of months of summer left, Yahoo! may attempt to get the new season started this Fall.

Either way, the fans should be excited enough to tune in. "Thank you to the greatest f%$#ing fans in the history of the human race," said Joel McHale in a statement. "It’s the Internet. We can swear now."