ManaByte
Member
In 2022 I officially cut the cord, but since I watch a lot of sports I still needed to have some kind of linear TV streaming service for NFL games and the like. In 2025 you can mostly do without that for NFL games, with the exception of the NFC games (and the 2025 Super Bowl) airing on Fox as they don't have a streaming option not tied to linear TV. The CBS, NBC, ESPN games all have a streaming option. But back in 2022 you had to have some kind of streaming TV for sports. And at the time things like Hulu, Sling, and Fubo WERE cheaper than traditional cable.
I spent the last couple of years jumping between the various streaming TV services. YouTube TV, DirectTV Stream, Fubo, Hulu Live TV. Fubo and DTV have the RSNs, but that makes them pretty expensive. YouTube TV is pretty bare-bones but the interface is the best. The best deal always ended up being Hulu where you can get Hulu Live TV + the ad-free Disney Bundle for the same or less than the others. This doesn't even include things like Netflix, Max, Prime, etc.
Two years later and with streaming price increases, and that's no longer true. Both YouTube TV and Hulu have jacked up prices.
I was shocked this weekend when an ISP issue took me down a new path.
Yesterday my ISP's dynamic IP refreshed and in their infinite stupidity they provisioned me with a new IP range 2,000 miles away from where I live. Obviously that fucks up streaming TV as I can't get local or regional channels anymore. I spent hours fighting with their idiot out-sourced techs who couldn't even configure a router or knew what DHCP was and obviously couldn't fix what IP range I was provisioned for, so I decided to look into other options.
The only viable option for no-data cap unlimited fiber where I am is a cable company I was with for 15 years in CA (and never had any real issues with). Their 1g fiber is a little less than what I've been paying for the last two years, but I was shocked to see the price with their "cable" (it's not "cable" anymore, it's just streaming TV). Basically I'm going to be getting the TV I had before WITH the regional sports networks Hulu doesn't have yet (they will soon with the Fubo merge and price increase), still have streaming services with it, and with the same internet speed I had, and I'll be saving about $50 a month. The trick with this (which I did every 2 years for 15 years) is you're in a contract and after two years you just need to have them re-bundle you to keep what you're saving.
It's pretty crazy how after years of people sticking it to the cable companies by cutting the "cord", they're now being fucked even harder with streaming and the old "cord" is actually cheaper and a better option that they don't even see.
I spent the last couple of years jumping between the various streaming TV services. YouTube TV, DirectTV Stream, Fubo, Hulu Live TV. Fubo and DTV have the RSNs, but that makes them pretty expensive. YouTube TV is pretty bare-bones but the interface is the best. The best deal always ended up being Hulu where you can get Hulu Live TV + the ad-free Disney Bundle for the same or less than the others. This doesn't even include things like Netflix, Max, Prime, etc.
Two years later and with streaming price increases, and that's no longer true. Both YouTube TV and Hulu have jacked up prices.
I was shocked this weekend when an ISP issue took me down a new path.
Yesterday my ISP's dynamic IP refreshed and in their infinite stupidity they provisioned me with a new IP range 2,000 miles away from where I live. Obviously that fucks up streaming TV as I can't get local or regional channels anymore. I spent hours fighting with their idiot out-sourced techs who couldn't even configure a router or knew what DHCP was and obviously couldn't fix what IP range I was provisioned for, so I decided to look into other options.
The only viable option for no-data cap unlimited fiber where I am is a cable company I was with for 15 years in CA (and never had any real issues with). Their 1g fiber is a little less than what I've been paying for the last two years, but I was shocked to see the price with their "cable" (it's not "cable" anymore, it's just streaming TV). Basically I'm going to be getting the TV I had before WITH the regional sports networks Hulu doesn't have yet (they will soon with the Fubo merge and price increase), still have streaming services with it, and with the same internet speed I had, and I'll be saving about $50 a month. The trick with this (which I did every 2 years for 15 years) is you're in a contract and after two years you just need to have them re-bundle you to keep what you're saving.
It's pretty crazy how after years of people sticking it to the cable companies by cutting the "cord", they're now being fucked even harder with streaming and the old "cord" is actually cheaper and a better option that they don't even see.
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