It is funny when you look at it that way. Cord cutting is currently saving me quite a chunk of change, but I'm also cheating a bit as a family member has a login I can use to access most of the cable options. I was paying anywhere from $73 to $130 for DirecTV depending on what month it was. I'm currently only paying for Netflix and Hulu, and when sports fire up I'll probably latch onto a bundle service such as Sling or PS Vue. That will put me at around $55, which is still $20 less than my cheapest DirecTV bill. It isn't as easy, though.
Even as streaming gets more cumbersome with 1,001 individual options, my favorite two things are:
- I have control over what I do and don't get and can turn them on/off monthly
- I don't have to do the semi-annual song and dance with DirecTV to keep my bill at a reasonable level.
It drove me insane that in four years, I never once changed my DirecTV package, but my bill would change price three times a year, every year. If they had simply charged me $80/month, every month, I wouldn't have dumped them.
I think a lot of the people making fun of cord cutters kind of miss a lot of the point of what the term a la carte entails, which is that it gives you, the customer, the ability to control your purchase of exactly what you want and spend exactly what you want to spend, without being forced to buy either a big bundle (paying for a bunch of things you don't want) or nothing. Also, if you do "want it all", well keep your cable. Last time I checked, that isn't going anywhere anytime soon. It will still be an option. Also, for those mocking the cost, keep in mind that it takes a crap ton of $10/month subscriptions to equal a $120/month cable bill (12 to be exact, which I can't even think of 12 subscriptions services out there right now), which you also don't have the ability to turn on and off at will.