When people first began to "cut the cord" it was at a time when a lot of programming - back episodes of popular TV programs and series, popular sporting events and the like, could be found for free on the internet. That, along with an OTA antenna for folks who were able to pick up those signals and maybe a subscription to Netflix seemed enough. Now, a lot of those back episodes that one could watch at no charge, are only available via a streaming subscription. Back episodes of stuff from HGTV, Discovery and the Food Network (along with a bunch of other content, including some attractive original programming) is only available via paid subscription. Want old episodes of NBC programming or series? You need to pay for Peacock, etc. and each of those subscriptions typically comes at a cost, and those costs are going up. So people who were complaining that they had to pay $120/month for cable that came with 1,500 channels they never watched, and they said they wanted an "a la carte" option to pick and choose only the channels or content they wanted, sort of got their wish - but now all those channels and content choices will sometimes require them to pay for at least a few individual streaming services. For us, in our case, we'd only save about $15/month if we dumped Comcast and went with other options, and we'd lose the sheer convenience of a "one stop shop" for everything we get through our cable box, so as of now, we're sticking with that.