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Law & Order: SVU: Seasons 22, 23 & 24; Dick Wolf Series Scores Record Renewals from NBC

Law and Order: Special Victims Unit TV show on NBC: season 22 (2020-21), season 23 (2021-22), season 24 (2022-23) renewal

(Photo: Virginia Sherwood/NBC)

Last fall, with the premiere of the 21st season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, the police drama surpassed Gunsmoke as the longest-running live-action series in U.S.  primetime television history. The classic Western aired “just” 20 seasons but did accrue 635 episodes while SVU has aired “only” 474 installments thus far. Now, we know that the series will get to keep chasing that record. NBC has announced that SVU has been renewed for three more seasons — seasons 22, 23, and 24 — which will keep the procedural drama on the air through the 2022-23 broadcast network season.

Airing on Thursday nights, Law & Order: SVU stars Mariska Hargitay, Ice-T, Kelli Giddish, and Peter Scanavino. Created by Dick Wolf, the police series centers on Lt. Olivia Benson (Hargitay) and her elite squad of New York City Police Department detectives that includes Sergeant Odafin “Fin” Tutuola (T), Detective Amanda Rollins (Giddish), and Detective Dominick “Sonny” Carisi (Scanavino). They investigate crimes including sexual assault, child abuse, and domestic violence.
The 21st season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit is averaging a 0.67 rating in the 18-49 demographic and 3.60 million viewers. Compared to season 20, that’s down by 22% and 14%, respectively.

Today, it was announced that producer Dick Wolf and his Wolf Entertainment company have signed a new five-year deal to remain at Universal Television. The latter is a division of NBCUniversal Content Studios and has been Wolf’s studio home for the past 36 years. As part of the pact, NBC gave three-year renewals to Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Chicago PD (through season 10), Chicago Fire (through season 11), and Chicago Med (through season eight).

Wolf’s deal comes on the heels of his recent pact with NBCUniversal’s soon-to-be-launched streaming service Peacock, where Wolf’s extensive library – including both the Law & Order and Chicago franchises – will be available for users.

“I’m gratified and excited that Universal will remain our home for five more years,” Wolf said. “This new term deal complements our recently concluded agreement to make Peacock one of the primary destinations for both the L&O and Chicago brands, as well as our extraordinary three-year NBC broadcast pickups on all four current series. We are now supercharged to expand our business on new platforms, both domestically and internationally, while continuing to produce our current and future series for broadcasting and streaming networks.”

What do you think? Are you a fan of the SVU TV series? Do you think that you’ll still be watching in three years? Do you think it will surpass Gunsmoke’s episode count?


 

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