1. Truthfully, Suits creator Aaron Korsh didn’t think he had much of a case when he shopped around his original script. As the writer’s strike was ending in 2008, Korsh’s agent suggested he turn his stories about former finance boss Harvey into a series. And as an aspiring comedy writer, he told The Hollywood Reporter“I sat down to write something in the tone of Entourage that took place on Wall Street. What emerged when I was finished was an hourlong show. I wouldn’t say it was a thriller, but it was much more dramatic, with these plot twists and turns.”
Not expecting a winning verdict, he continued, “I certainly didn’t think in a million years that anybody would buy this show. I was just trying to write a sample that someone would maybe read and hire me off.”
Among the tweaks that were made when it was transformed into a pilot for USA: Protagonist Mike Ross (Patrick J. Adams) and co. were switched from a team of investment bankers to a group of high-powered attorneys. “It raised the stakes,” Korsh acknowledged. Because now Mike, who hadn’t graduated college, much less passed the bar, wasn’t just lying his way into a lucrative gig, “he was committing a crime,” said Korsh, “and the law also gave us opportunities for all kinds of ethical dilemmas.”