Who has cut the cord to their cable or satellite provider?
How have you done it? Savings per month?
Been about six or seven years. Thousands and thousands of dollars.
Amplified rabbit ears, Apple TV, an online only Netflix subscription, and though we don't use it as much as we should, Amazon Prime Video.
We kept a very high speed cable internet connection at the city house and when we moved to the boonies we went with as fast as we could get, a fixed wireless company using Motorola Canopy gear.
What's interesting is, we really weren't intending to be "cable cutters". I had been a happy low tier Dish customer from all the way back to the early TiVo days. At least a decade (more actually) of being a customer and even did their DishMover thing leaving old antennas and LNAs behind at our condo when we bought our city house.
Liked their tech back then, and better pricing over DirecTV. In fact, as mentioned when Comcast came a-calling with blazing fast Internet we bought that but kept our Dish.
The epitome of a happy loyal customer. Until...
The thing that did it for me was hearing Dish's commercials that they'd do a whole house DVR install for new customers for $99. I needed some cables run anyway, and had spare TVs for the guest room and basement workshop, so I called them up.
They unzipped their fly and took a leak in my face -- saying that only new customers qualified. I said that after ten plus years of service, that seemed counter to the idea of good customers service.
I mean, I know Charlie Ergen is a self-absorbed prick, but I had supported Dish partly because they're a Colorado company, etc... even after knowing many employees personally, who did their time in the hell hole known as Dish customer service or worse, their IT department, and GTFO.
They're well known for being a crap hole sweatshop, to all but the engineering departments, and the fact that even in the worst parts of any recession they never stop advertising for labor, proves it. Revolving door. IT people get six months to a year in for experience early career, and bail for greener pastures -- and sanity.
Anyway... I asked the CSR how long I had to not be a customer to get the deal and they said six months. I said, fine. Cancel service.
They sounded shocked, sent me to their "retention" people, where I made the offer: "Give me the deal new customers get after over ten years of being a solid customer."
They said "we can't". I said, "cancel service". We're done here.
At that point the intent was to return in six months and/or shop the best deal between the already installed cable, Dish, and DirecTV.
As six months went by I noticed a few things:
- I only missed a few shows.
- I didn't miss watching TV all the damn time. I did other stuff.
- I had more money in my bank account every month.
- Rabbit ears are a pain in the ass, but an uncompressed HD broadcast looks better than the compressed crap through the Dish local network rebroadcasts. (They still hasn't launched the bird that then had a staging issue and had to take a creative lap around the moon to park it properly, their available bandwidth sucked then and DirecTV was solidly kicking their ass on picture quality.)
- Your view of news and other events is generally better if you're not paying people to pipe propaganda into your home.
- There were a lot of really great shows in re-runs I'd never watched, that became favorites -- and a few that we simply watched a year later than original broadcast date.
(Nobody stands around the office water cooler and talks about what everyone watched on one of the big three broadcast networks last night anymore. Who cares?)
- Stuff I really wanted to watch nearly as soon as broadcast -- is available at unholy high prices via Apple TV. You just have to keep it to a FEW or you're paying as much as full service TV DVR. You get priorities straight quickly, and buy two or three shows a year.
- Netflix upped the ante with their own shows. House of Cards kicked most other show's asses around here for actually looking forward to a TV show. Releasing an entire season at once was awesome. Set aside a couple of Saturdays and, done.
Never bothered to turn it back on.
This year, and around this time of year every year, I think about ordering up DirecTV for NFL Sunday Ticket -- but doing the math on their "deals" where they subsidize year 1 with year 2 to make the monthly costs look better...
, I haven't done it yet. Plus all their little BS equipment fees, taxes, etc...
Once you calculate what you'll really be paying annually... Hell, my high end gun club styled after a country club feel and all the ammo for plenty of shooting at the range, costs less than a simple multi-room DVR package with the little Genie things. I'd rather just go to the range. Or flying. Or even just poking at PoA from an iPad, than watch TV.
I think they're up to CSI: Des Moines, and NCIS: Guam by now, right? Law and Order: Parking Enforcement? LOL. Oh goodie.
When we RV we are couch potatoes at night and I think about putting an automatic antenna on the roof for either Dish or DirecTV just to ease setup, or a tripod mount, but that feeling usually passes quickly too. The trailer has an amplified antenna on the roof and usually it's fun to catch a cheesy middle of nowhere local news and see what is important stuff to the locals, or just nab a PBS re-run of Red Green while enjoying a margarita.
(Dish has the far better deal there in that they allow RVers to turn service on and off on a monthly basis. DirecTV really should do that.)