Summary

  • Suits' theme song "Greenback Boogie" by Ima Robot references the great lengths people go to make money, fitting the show's focus on lawyers hustling to secure billables and keep the firm afloat.
  • The song's lyrics highlight how earning money becomes addicting over time — somehow mirroring Mike's journey
  • Director Kevin Bray chose "Greenback Boogie" as the theme song. They considered another song as well, but ultimately realized that the catchy and thematically fitting track worked well for Suits.

Suits opens with its addicting theme song, and the Suits theme song lyrics have a deeper meaning. Four years after it ended its original run on USA Network, Suits finds new life when it arrived on Netflix. Since becoming available on the streaming platform, it has consistently topped charts, with numbers combined with data from Peacock. The legal drama follows the lives of the lawyers at Pearson, Hardman (and its subsequent iterations) as they operate in New York City.

The premise of Suits is quite simple, Pearson, Hardman's top lawyer, Harvey Specter hires Mike Ross as his associate. Mike's deep knowledge of the legal system and eidetic memory, not to mention swagger made him the perfect mentee for Harvey. However, there is one big problem: he never went to Harvard Law or any law school for that matter. Despite this, Harvey still hires Mike, starting their thrilling time working together while also trying hard to ensure that their secret never comes out. While not obvious, the Suits theme song lyrics directly relate to this.

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What Suits' Theme Song "Greenback Boogie" Means

The Song Is About How Money Becomes Addicting Over Time

Suits' 134 episodes all opened with its introductory scene with its theme song: "Greenback Boogie." Performed by American band Ima Robot, the song was released in 2010 as the B-side to Another Man's Treasure. "Greenback" is an American slang term for money, while "Boogie" refers to people's efforts to earn a living. Together, it means the great lengths that people go to just to make money. The lyrics of the song talk about how earning money becomes addicting over time. Someone's initial intention changes after they get a taste of what it's like to have financial ability.

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The Full Lyrics To "Greenback Boogie"

The Full Song Features More Lyrics Than What's Heard In The Suits Intro

Harvey, Jessica, and Louis working in the office in Suits

See the money wanna stay, for your meal

Get another piece of pie, for your wife

Everybody wanna know, how it feel

Everybody wanna see, what it's like

Baby wanna be a queen, well alright

We all deserve the finer things, in this life

So working on a little job, in the night

It's forty dollars an hour when I, see the light

The boss say you got a little time, and oh my

He'll be working in a small box, till he die

Me, I gotta be free, all my life

I want a little cream cheese, in my pie

Alright...

Yeah! I'll step back, while you go dance

The greenback boogie

Mother fing boogie

Now I'm putting on a big wig, walking hard

Hanging with them big pigs, all them dogs

Got me a couple ideas, straight from God

I want a bean pie

Order me a bean pie

I'll even eat a bean pie, I don't mind

Me and Missy is so very busy busy making money

Alright...

All step back, I'm 'bout to dance

The greenback boogie

The greenback boogie

Boogie now for me

Hey!

Say, it's far better, when you give it away

It's called the greenback boogie

What people don't say, I say

It's better, when you give it away

It's called the greenback boogie

Don't give it away now, I say

It's better, when you give it away

It's called the greenback boogie

Don't give it away now, I say

See the money wanna stay, for your meal

I'll say it's gonna put some love, in your life

Don't you really wanna know, how it feel?

Everybody wanna see, what it's like

Babe you wanna be inside, it ain't lies

We all know there's better things in this life

Yes I'll step out, on your expense

Doin' the greenback boogie

Mother fing boogie

Boogie oogie oogie

Greenback Boogie

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to...

Come on back to...

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to paradise

Come on back to...

Come on back to...

It's the greenback boogie

It's the greenback boogie

Don't give it away now

Don't give it away now, I say

It's better, when you greenback boogie

Well don't give it away

Well don't give it away, I say

It's better...

It's the greenback boogie

Don't give it away...

"Greenback Boogie" is available to listen to on Spotify and Apple Music.

How The "Greenback Boogie" Lyrics Connect To Suits

The Song Refers To The Lawyers' Attempts To Keep Pearson, Hardman Afloat

Harvey and Mike on the street walking in Suits.

In the case of Suits, "Greenback Boogie" refers to the Pearson, Hardman lawyers' work to secure their billables and keep the firm afloat amid a string of crises. On a smaller scale, it could be about Mike at the start of the show. He was desperate to get some money to ensure that his grandmother was fully taken care of. This forced him to partake in Trevor's drug dealing scheme, which almost got him caught. When he met Harvey, he started to earn more as he presented himself as a legitimate lawyer.

Suits creator Aaron Korsh has revealed that he wasn't the one who chose "Greenback Boogie." Instead, the pilot's director and producer for seasons 1 and 2, Kevin Bray, decided on it. Apparently, there was another song that they were considering, but he couldn't what it was. In any case, the song worked well as Suits' theme song. Not only is it catchy, but it also has ties to the legal drama's narrative.

Other TV Shows With Fitting Theme Songs

A Memorable Opening Track Like Suits Makes A Show Near-Impossible To Forget

Suits is far from the only show to have an incredibly fitting theme song, or one that's since become synonymous with the show thanks to it being so apt and memorable. Many TV shows, most often sitcoms, have an incredibly well-selected intro track that perfectly fit their theme and premise. One of the best examples, of course, is Friends.

"I'll Be There For You" by rock duo the Rembrandts was made specifically for Friends, and to say that it's perfect for the show is an understatement. Interestingly, the original plan was to use the R.E.M song "Shiny Happy People", which would have been equally fitting (although the band chose not to license the track out in the end). The catchy lyrics of "I'll Be There For You" fit Friends incredibly well though, and this is one of the key reasons it worked so well for the show and, arguably, helped it gain popularity during its first few seasons.

Another TV theme song that was made specifically for a show and fits incredibly well is that of The Big Bang Theory. The sitcom's theme song is titled "The History Of Everything", and is by Canadian rock group the Barenaked Ladies. As well as containing the show's title in the lyrics, the quick-fire listing of key historical and scientific events feels incredibly fitting for the core characters of the show like Leonard, Sheldon, Howard, and Raj, all of whom are scientists and (in Sheldon's case at the very least) literal geniuses.

Two more prominent examples are the Malcolm in the Middle theme song "Boss of Me" by They Might Be Giants, and "Superman" by Lazlo Bane from Scrubs. "Boss of Me" was written specifically for Malcolm in the Middle, and won They Might Be Giants a Grammy Award.

"Superman", on the other hand, wasn't written with Scrubs in mind, which is incredibly surprising given just how well the lyrics fit JD's journey from being a naive and nervous junior doctor to being one of the most capable on the team. All in all, as much as the theme song of Suits is perfect for the show, it's far from the only series with an incredibly appropriate intro track.

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Suits
TV-14
Drama
Release Date
2011 - 2019

Suits is a legal drama series that premiered in 2011, centering on Mike Ross, a college dropout with a photographic memory who lands a job at a top New York law firm despite lacking a law degree. Partnering with one of the city's best legal closers, Harvey Specter, they navigate the challenges of high-stakes cases and firm dynamics.

Network
USA Network
Cast
Gabriel Macht, Rick Hoffman, Sarah Rafferty, Patrick J. Adams, Titus Welliver, Dagmara Dominczyk, Currie Graham, Russell Hornsby, Sergio Di Zio, Scott Michael Campbell, Elisabeth Hower, Edie Inksetter, Allan Royal, Caroline Palmer, Tomaso Sanelli, Jacob Buster, James Kall
Writers
Aaron Korsh, Genevieve Sparling, Daniel Arkin, Ethan Drogin, Sharyn Rothstein, Jon Cowan, Erica Lipez, Justin Peacock, Nora Zuckerman, Lilla Zuckerman, Chris Downey, Garrett Schabb, Kristin Rusk Robinson, Sean Jablonski, Ian Deitchman, Paul Redford, Michael L. Kramer
Seasons
9
Streaming Service(s)
Amazon Prime Video
Creator(s)
Aaron Korsh