‘Suits’ Renewed for Seventh Season at USA Network

The cable network also set October premiere dates for new dramas 'Falling Water' and 'Eyewitness.' Ian Watson/USA Network

The cable network also set October premiere dates for new dramas 'Falling Water' and 'Eyewitness.'

USA Network is keeping Suits tied up.

The NBCUniversal-owned cable network has renewed drama Suits for a seventh season, execs announced Wednesday at the Television Critics Association's summer press tour.

The news comes after the Aaron Korsch drama is only three episodes into its sixth season and as the Patrick J. Adams starrer from Universal Cable Productions is averaging 3 million total viewers and 1.1 million among adults 18-39 when factoring in three days of delayed viewing.

Suits ranks as USA Network's longest-running drama and its only remaining series left over from its former "Blue Skies" brand. The cabler, with last year's launch of Emmy-nominated drama Mr. Robot, has abandoned that brand in favor of darker and edgier drama fare. That also includes Queen of the South — with a verdict on season two yet to be determined — as well as forthcoming dramas Eyewitness and Falling Water. Premiere dates for both Eyewitness (Sunday, Oct. 16 at 10 p.m.) and Falling Water (Thursday, Oct. 13 at 10 p.m.) were also announced Wednesday.

For USA, the decision to give a Sunday slot to Eyewitness — a crime thriller based on a Norwegian drama that stars Julianne Nicholson — marks the cabler's second original to air on what has become the new prime viewing night of the week. USA previously aired drama Motive there and, most recently, has found good success with repeats of Law & Order: SVU in the slot. (Meanwhile, premium cable network Starz also recently shifted its originals from Saturdays to Sundays in a bid to be part of the critical watercooler conversation.)

The renewal for Suits comes as USA Network recently announced that its planned July bow Shooter would be delayed until the fall out of respect to the victims of a wave of shootings across the country. 

Television Critics Association Suits USA Network

Lesley Goldberg