Exactly. The only network programming I now watch when it airs, via television (OK, YouTube TV, but it still counts as television, right?) is live sports and breaking news. And even for those, there are internet-only options available, and that's where much of my "TV" consumption is these days.The problem is it's not being replaced by any one thing, but the audience is being spread out over many different things. Some of them still watch broadcast TV, just not as much. All this is similar to what's happening to radio. People still listen to broadcast radio. Just not as much and not as often. They haven't all gone to any one place. Just disbursed over many different places. Advertising is based on attracting a mass audience, and there's not much media that still does.
