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Top 21 Reasons To Get Rid Of Cable Once And For All
Cut Cable Today ^ | 3-11-15 | Mr. Cable Cutter

Posted on 11/22/2016 6:00:43 AM PST by RKBA Democrat

Unsure if you’re ready to take the plunge and cut the cord? The truth is that now is the best time in history to make the call. It seems like every day, there are new reasons to get rid of cable. But in case you aren’t sure what those reasons are, I’ve collected them here, all in one place for you.

#1 It’s Easier Than Ever

Had you asked me a few years ago if getting rid of cable was feasible, I would have hesitated. But now, well, things are different. It’s easier than it has ever been. All you really need is an Internet connection, a streaming box, and a streaming service. Anyone can set it up–no tech savviness required.

#2 Financial – The Savings are Massive

According to the FCC, cable prices are rising at a rate that’s higher than inflation. In fact, many expect the average cable bill to be somewhere around $125 by the end of 2015. That’s almost $1500 a year! Crazy, right? Especially since you probably signed on for some great promotional rate that expired after one year…yet you’re locked in for at least two. Not to mention all of those hidden costs!

The facts are impossible to refute: if you cut the cord, you’ll save big, even if you’re paying for subscription services. It’s one of the biggest reasons to get rid of cable that exists. Period. Check out my setup, which costs me only $39.49 a month.

T-Mobile customers have even bigger cost savings — With Sling TV and T-Mobile’s latest partnership, T-Mobile users can now sign up for Sling’s basic package for just $14/month for up to a full year. That’s an incredible 30% in savings! You can watch more than 20 channels on your T-Mobile eligible device, and can even cancel the plan whenever you’d like. Plus, you won’t ever have to worry about data overage fees with T-Mobile’s Binge On plan — just another way you can save! Learn more about this money-saving offer here. (Link embedded in article) There are plenty of other streaming options with similar promotional deals, so it certainly doesn’t hurt to shop around until you find one that saves you the most — and because you’re free of cable, you have the ability to do so risk free!

#3 Available Content Keeps Growing

I remember back when Netflix first started their streaming service, it seemed like they had very little I wanted to watch. Man, are those days gone. These days, there’s seemingly endless content. From hit shows to documentaries, there’s something for everyone.

#4 Watch Live Sports Online

Many people hold onto their cable for live sporting events. Admittedly, this was my biggest sticking point. But like all other aspects of cord cutting, this segment is growing quickly. MLB has MLB.TV, which will allow you to watch just about everything. The NBA and NHL also have streaming services through their respective leagues.

The most difficult to find is the NFL, but you can watch most of your home team’s games with an antenna. And if you can’t give up ESPN, you can also try Sling TV. For more detailed info on how you can cancel cable and still watch your favorite live sports, check out my guide here (link embedded in article)

#5 No More Cable Contracts

Contracts suck. And while big cell phone companies like T-Mobile are making moves to give the people what they want with respect to contracts, the cable companies aren’t budging. But the paid streaming services, well, they aren’t wasting their time trying to lock you in. Netflix, Hulu Plus…they all will let you quit whenever you’re ready. No hidden fees.

#6 Freedom from a Broken System

Making you pay for a bunch of stuff you aren’t watching, and raising the rates in the meanwhile, is a broken system. Why should you be part of that? When you get rid of cable, you are stepping away, freely, into the future. And the future is bright (and much cheaper).

#7 Bye Bye Commercials

Did you know that the average child has seen 16,000 commercials in a year? That’s right, their brains are being inundated with advertising. God only knows what negative effects this can cause. By getting rid of cable, you can drastically reduce, if not completely eliminate, the commercials your child is exposed to.

ESPN. No Cable. No Strings Attached. Try it Today. Sling TV.

#8 Extra Benefits From Streaming Services

Sometimes when you sign on with a streaming service, you get extra perks. For example, Amazon Prime comes with free 2-day shipping (which I take frequently advantage of). BallStreams gives you access to Summer League and international competitions. And many sports streaming sites don’t blackout games.

#9 You Can Try Most Streaming Services For Free

With so many streaming options available, you might find it hard to decide which to go with. Luckily, many of them make it easy on you, allowing you to try them out for free. Here’s what some of the major streaming services offer:

Sling TV–Click here for a free 7-day trial (link embedded in article) Amazon Prime–Click here for a free 30-day trial (link embedded in article) Netflix–One free month Hulu Plus–One free week HBO Now–One free month

#10 Sends a Message to Big Cable

While cord cutting is still in the early stages (the major cable companies lost about .2% of subscribers between 2013 and 2014), things are getting worse, not better, for them. With HBO flying solo, and Apple looking to get into the game, there’s no way they can ignore the shift. When you make the decision to get rid of cable, you’re helping make sure that the cable companies take notice.

#11 Purposeful Viewing vs. Passively Watching Garbage

I think we can all agree that we probably watch more TV than we should. Especially if you have cable. Think about it–how often do you just turn the TV on and let it play in the background? Or sit on the couch watching reruns of one of those HGTV shows for no good reason?

When you cut the cord and go with a streaming service, you’re more likely to engage in purposeful watching. In other words, you aren’t just going to plop in front of the TV and watch some garbage just for the sake of doing so. Instead, you’re going to sit, search, and watch only when you’re interested.

#12 Better Quality

OTA HD broadcasts are HIGHER QUALITY than what cable provides. Cable companies compress their broadcasts due to limited bandwidth and infrastructure costs. You probably spent good money for an HDTV…it’s time to get the most out of your picture!

#13 It’s Legal

Some people mistakenly associate streaming shows with illegal activity. Rest assured, there are plenty of completely legal ways to stream content. Be it sports, TV shows, movies….the means are out there. Are their illegal streaming sites out there? You betcha. But they’re easy to spot, and quite frankly, you don’t want to use them–they’re loaded with pop-ups and spyware.

#14 Great Original Programming

Here’s a growing trend–streaming services producing and providing amazing, original TV shows that can’t be found elsewhere. Here’s a quick list of some of my favorites:

House of Cards (Netflix) Narcos (Netflix) Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (Crackle) Behind the Mask (Hulu) Alpha House (Amazon) Transparent (Amazon)

#15 Most New Episodes of Hit Shows are Available Online or Via Antenna

Giving up cable can be hard if it means not being able to talk about the current hit show at the water cooler. What many people don’t realize is that the latest episodes of many hit shows are often available online. For example, AMC makes their episodes available for about a month. It’s also important not to forget that if the hit show you’re watching is on network TV, you can likely catch it live with a good digital antenna. Which leads me to the next point…

#16 Get Free HD Content with a Digital Antenna

I was shocked at how many stations I picked up when I got a digital antenna (over 70!!!). I picked up all sorts of stuff I didn’t know existed. Of course, what you can access depends largely on where you live. But unless you live pretty far out, chances are you can get some decent channels. For a look at just how many broadcast channels are out there, check out this table on Wikipedia.(link embedded in article) And if you’re wondering what stations are available in your area, you can try the FCC’s tool here.

#17 Fewer Dealings with Annoying Customer Service Reps

Who hasn’t had to deal with less-than-helpful cable customer service reps? I know I have my stories to tell, that’s for sure! While it’s true that you will still probably have to deal with your ISP’s customer service from time to time, gone will be the days of calling to deal with troubles with cable.

It’s a rare occasion that you would need to talk to your streaming service’s customer service. And if you have to, well, my experiences have been great. Netflix and Amazon customer service is hands down top notch.

#18 Greater Flexibility

When you’re streaming content, you have much more flexibility. Tired of Netflix? Drop them next month and switch to Hulu. Decided wrestling isn’t worth your time? Cancel the WWE Network and they won’t renew your subscription. It really is that simple.

There’s also flexibility in when, where, and how you watch. Most streaming services have apps that work on your mobile devices, allowing you to watch anywhere, any time. You can also hook your devices up to your TV via a variety of methods (HDMI cable, Apple TV, etc.).

#19 Customized Viewing Experience

Unlike cable services, most streaming services do their part in trying to customize your viewing experience to better suit your needs. For example, Netflix will suggest content based on your viewing habits. They also will give you other suggestions for similar content when searching. Hulu and Amazon Prime let you subscribe to shows and receive alerts.

#20 Easier to Sift Through Content

Is there anything more annoying than trying to search through your cable TV provider’s programming guide? Paging down through hundreds of shows you would never consider watching, trying to find that one program. Forget that! Regardless of where you choose to stream your content, you can rest assured that it’s completely searchable, making it simple to sort through what you want to watch.

#21 There are New Streaming Options

It’s hard to argue–streaming is the way of the future. It feels like there are new options for streaming on a daily basis. CBS, HBO, and Sony are all jumping in the game. Apple sounds like it wants to as well. Who knows what services will come next? But here’s what I do know…they’ll keep coming.

Are you ready? It’s YOUR turn to be a cord cutter.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Chit/Chat; Miscellaneous; Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: cable; cabletv; cutcable; cutthecord; economicwarfare
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To: RKBA Democrat

Cord cutting requires you to ditch the TV altogether. This is just a primer on how to get all the stuff you get on cable TV box through the internet box.


61 posted on 11/22/2016 7:47:47 AM PST by BigSkyFreeper (Rest In Peace MeekMom (1966-2016))
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To: Jamestown1630

Yes, the cable ‘a la carte’ ban you will find in law somewhere.

Congress creates these monopolies, cable TV ain’t no free market place. Hell the ‘Healthcare Marketplace’ is another laughingstock. Bet a ‘Cable Marketplace’ exists in the law somewhere to ban freedom.


62 posted on 11/22/2016 7:47:54 AM PST by TheNext (Hillary Hurts Children & Women)
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To: VanDeKoik

My Roku died so I hooked my laptop to TV and use wireless mouse for a remote. Works great.


63 posted on 11/22/2016 7:50:10 AM PST by suthener
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To: Varda

NHL Center Ice is available online and on Roku.


64 posted on 11/22/2016 7:53:34 AM PST by BigSkyFreeper (Rest In Peace MeekMom (1966-2016))
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To: RKBA Democrat
My wife is the holdout in cutting the cord. There are a few channels she likes to watch all the time. My DirecTV bill is around $128 per month. About the only things I watch on it are TCM and Smithsonian, NatGeo and Animal Planet. I could live without TCM I guess, because I also have a fairly huge library of classic films and TV shows on Blu-ray or DVD. The others are not must-haves. If it were only up to me, we'd turn the TV off when nothing is on and play music.

But my wife has to watch the Hallmark Channel and more importantly, the Hallmark Movies & Mysteries channel. Hallmark doesn't stream, and the Mystery Channel is never part of the stripped down "basic" packages. It is galling to pay for a bunch of channels we never watch, or don't need to watch.

65 posted on 11/22/2016 7:58:13 AM PST by Sans-Culotte (Time to get the US out of the UN and the UN out of the US!)
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To: Morpheus2009
Netflix is more cost effective. Same with Amazon Prime. You can pick and choose your specific shows either way.

I don't watch TV. I am only interested in streaming movies. I tried Amazon Prime and found that their movies offerings were oldie moldies. If I wanted to watch a newly released movie, I'd have to pay $3 or $4 to rent it. Heck with that! I currently pay $10 to Netflix, and sadly, their movies aren't much better. I am not interested in paying to watch old TV episodes. Is there a better service with newer movies included for streaming movies? I use my cable internet modem with wifi and an Amazon Fire Stick to interface with the flatscreen TV which I only use to watch my movies. I don't even know how to watch TV here in NYC, as I haven't watched TV for nearly 40 years.

66 posted on 11/22/2016 7:58:46 AM PST by EinNYC
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To: TheNext

Content providers are complicit with cable/satellite providers.

Notice how most content (network/channel) websites may have streaming episodes of programs, but you first have to sign in 'through your cable/satellite TV provider'. Thus, you can't legally view many web content streams without also subscribing to cable/satellite TV.


67 posted on 11/22/2016 7:59:08 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: oh8eleven

You can always find a live Fox News feed on youtube.

https://youtu.be/nO_8hRpInw4


68 posted on 11/22/2016 8:01:33 AM PST by Karl Spooner
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To: TheNext
Bet a ‘Cable Marketplace’ exists in the law somewhere to ban freedom.

Communications Act of 1996. Growing up in the 1970's and 1980's, my parents had a large backyard dish and we could watch just about anything for free, including the major sports leagues. Basically the same signals used by TV stations back in the day to get their news and sports.

Once cable channels started encrypting their uplink signals, that required you to get a decryption device and you had to pay for it. Back in those days you could pick what you wanted to watch. That was until the mid 1990's when the fools in DC passed the Communications Act of 1996.

69 posted on 11/22/2016 8:04:42 AM PST by BigSkyFreeper (Rest In Peace MeekMom (1966-2016))
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To: TomGuy
Notice how most content (network/channel) websites may have streaming episodes of programs, but you first have to sign in 'through your cable/satellite TV provider'. Thus, you can't legally view many web content streams without also subscribing to cable/satellite TV.

And that's how cable/satellite companies retain customers. There are ways around it, if you can find someone who is still paying for cable/satellite TV willing to share their login details with you. I use a service called Watch TV Everywhere, using my cable provider. The main account allows up to 6 others to be able to access content under the main account. The main account is the person paying the cable bill.

70 posted on 11/22/2016 8:08:39 AM PST by BigSkyFreeper (Rest In Peace MeekMom (1966-2016))
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To: RKBA Democrat

re: Legal streaming

Many networks are starting to offer streaming — for a monthly fee. Some of them are still technologically behind, so their streams frequently rebuffer, etc.

By the time you pay individually for CBS and HBO and STARZ and Showtime and NFL and NHL and MBA and Hulu and Netflix and and and ...

Your combined bill adds up and you have to wrangle various devices to get a particular program. They are getting better, but for a similar price, you get cable/satellite TV for the convenience.


71 posted on 11/22/2016 8:08:49 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: RKBA Democrat

I bought a digital HD antenna at Fry’s for ~$90. Four bolts and a quick tap into the existing cable and I had HD over the air broadcasts. I even discovered a new channel that the missus and I love to watch (ME TV).


72 posted on 11/22/2016 8:11:15 AM PST by Mr.Unique (The government, by its very nature, cannot give except what it first takes.)
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To: Vaquero

You’re lucky. Our service is out constantly and forget credit on the bill. The wait time for repairs is three weeks out. The last big outage, we went in and hollered at them to give us the new equipment and we’d hook it up ourselves. Got the holier than thou attitude but an hour later they gave us a new monitor and cable box.

We’re too far out for any sort of antenna. We’re on an old plan with the internet and cable so that dropping down to basic would cost more. Even so, it’s too expensive. It’s all wonky because we get different channels on different tvs and there’s no menu for half of it. Pain in the backside.

Have Netflex but I’ve sat down to scroll through their menu for hours on end finding nothing to watch. Viewing recent shows from channels’ internet sites is easier.

Never ever bundle everything. When it goes out, you lose everything. We have to have cable and internet bundled but keep the phone separate. We finally gave up the landline because it got too expensive and are pleased with the less than $30/mo. Verizon thing that plugs into the wall. We’re also down to one cell phone on a $20 something/mo. plan.


73 posted on 11/22/2016 8:17:38 AM PST by bgill (From the CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola")
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To: philled

Hmmmm. I’m not into sports, so I don’t know all the details to get around cable for specific sports networks.

Check out this article, though. It has some discussion of Fox1 and might have a solution

https://www.groundedreason.com/watch-sports-without-cable/


74 posted on 11/22/2016 8:21:06 AM PST by RKBA Democrat (Right versus left is no longer as relevant as Nationalist versus globalist.)
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To: BBB333

What most of the proponent fail to see is that people in rural areas (outside of large cities), don’t have good high speed internet service available. Nor do cable companies service rural areas. Dish and DirecTV are what these citizens depend upon.

Although Dish and DirectTV say they offer internet service, in most cases this is still through a land line.

A relative had better internet connectivity on a mountain top in Haiti, with no running water and dependence on solar panels and a generator, than we have at our home just outside a large city. They used HughesNet. that can be costly.


75 posted on 11/22/2016 8:24:47 AM PST by Yulee (Village of Albion)
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To: Jamestown1630

You’re right. Al la carte would be better. First thing we’d cut are the two dozen music channels and the half dozen Spanish channels.


76 posted on 11/22/2016 8:28:18 AM PST by bgill (From the CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola")
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To: bgill

This website makes searching Netflix and Amazon Prime much easier:

http://instantwatcher.com

I wish Youtube had an easy way to search their movies and TV programs. It is maddening to try to find anything on Youtube, without having to filter through a bunch of junk and short clips.


77 posted on 11/22/2016 8:30:03 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: RKBA Democrat

I have noticed one downside from cutting loose from Comcrap...

Periodically, people show up at my door trying to convince me to sign up again, and they are annoying and persistent. It isn’t enough to simply tell them you aren’t interested.

**** Comcrap.


78 posted on 11/22/2016 8:31:56 AM PST by Fresh Wind (Hillary: Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass GO. Do not collect 2 billion dollars.)
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To: TomGuy

YouTube gives you a filter function to allow you to eliminate anything under 20 minutes. That lets most complete shows through and ignores the clips.


79 posted on 11/22/2016 8:34:32 AM PST by Fresh Wind (Hillary: Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass GO. Do not collect 2 billion dollars.)
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To: Karl Spooner

Thanks for the link. Runs about 3 minutes behind cable.


80 posted on 11/22/2016 8:40:36 AM PST by bgill (From the CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola")
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