Cord cutting ain't what it used to be, unfortunately. The media conglomerates have caught on and their legal teams have been navigating streaming ownership rights to shows and channels a lot more stringently (or greedily) it seems.
We got rid of cable about 12 years ago when we were appalled to be paying over $100/mo for standard stuff. At first we had a OTA HD antenna and it worked pretty darn well. We were getting channels we didn't even know existed with better picture quality than we had with cable. Then we moved and now have a wall of pine trees between us and the 'city', so the OTA antenna became useless. We then went with SlingTV - it was $20/mo (not just an intro rate) and gave us everything we wanted (including ESPN channels, SEC Network, and Fox Sports regional feeds). Then Fox Sports was bought out by Bally and they decided they wanted a bigger piece of the streaming pie so SlingTV lost the Fox regional sports channels, which meant we lost the Braves (which is pretty much all we watch during baseball season). We eventually dropped SlingTV and went to something else (maybe ?Hulu w/ Live TV?). But over the past ~5 years, it's been a constant turnover of streaming services losing subsets of channels as more media conglomerates decide to start their own streaming service (a la Paramount+ that was mentioned earlier) and we find ourselves chasing the channels that we actually want to watch. Right now, I think we have DirecTV streaming (mostly for baseball in the summer and college football in the fall), Amazon (included with AMZ), HBO (through an AmEx deal), Disney+ through a Verizon deal, AppleTV (not gonna lie - just for Ted Lasso, though I've flagged a few movies I want to watch there before we cancel), and Youtube Premium (I have grown to despise commericals) for the various YT channels that we subscribe to (yes, 6PC is included in that list). If I were to add it up (which I don't want to, but probably should do), I'm sure we're collectively paying well over the $100/mo that we were appalled by 12 years ago.
Best suggestion I can give is to figure out what you want to watch for the next 6-12 months and find the streaming service with the best intro deal to meet those needs and be fully prepared to jump ship when the intro deal runs out or the channels that you want get cut from your lineup. There is no such thing as 'best of breed' in streaming services anymore.