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Hey everyone, it's Michael and I'm back
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with your streaming TV news and updates
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this time for August 2025. And today I'm
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covering the big changes from these
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brands and more. Welcome in. And I know
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a lot of you are thinking this month
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about either signing up for or switching
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live TV streaming services in time for
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fall sports. It's actually more than
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half of the people who responded to my
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recent poll. And look at this, the
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results. They're nearly identical as
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last year when I asked the same question
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about live TV plans. But with so much
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changing this year, there's been a lot
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of talk about whether services like
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YouTube TV are in trouble. I thought I'd
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share my thoughts on the topic. First,
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here is a look at the full bundle
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pricing. This is for live TV streaming
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services at the start of the month, but
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it only tells part of the story. You
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see, the regular price for YouTube TV,
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$82.99 a month. Yep, pretty high. But
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there's this a new deal for the month of
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August. New customers don't pay anywhere
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near that price. $49.99 a month for the
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first 3 months. And even some existing
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customers, they're still paying the old
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price, $72.99 a month after redeeming
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back-toback six-month retention offers.
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So, a lot of customers, both new and
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existing, just aren't paying full price
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for services like YouTube TV. Things are
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highly competitive right now, especially
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this time of year, and they're about to
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get even more competitive. Of course,
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I'm talking about the new ESPN and Fox
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One apps. But the reason I'm not showing
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you these apps, they haven't launched at
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the start of the month, still coming
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soon. I've already shared that these new
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apps, they're not targeting people with
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big bundles like YouTube TV, but I'm
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still curious about them, and I know
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some of you may be, too. Because of the
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timing of all this, here's what I'm
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thinking may be the best move for fall.
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Start with one of the live TV services
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that you already know. Keep that for a
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month or two and grab a deal if you can.
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Then after the new apps launch, you can
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always switch to them mid-season if it
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makes sense for you. Now, I don't think
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either the ESPN or Fox One apps are
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going to lead to mass cancellations at
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YouTube TV. Not this fall, and
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especially since YouTube TV still has
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NFL Sunday Ticket. I do think the
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changes could lead to more deals, and
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that's something I'll be tracking this
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month and into next month. But what
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happens after football season, though?
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This is where I think the new options
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are going to lead to more seasonal
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YouTube TV subscribers, not year round
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customers. It's something I know a lot
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of you are already doing. My number one
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live TV savings tip this fall and every
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fall is to become a new customer. And
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pretty soon we'll have even more
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choices. Let's keep it moving. And while
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we're talking about live TV, that deal
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to combine Fubo with Disney's Hulu Live,
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well, it could happen sooner than
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expected. A new filing says it could
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close at the end of 2025 or early 2026.
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Now to a quick streaming satisfaction
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check. Check it out. There's a three-way
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tie at the top. Paramount Plus, Peacock,
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and YouTube Premium. What do you think
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about that? This is from the American
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Customer Satisfaction Index. Hulu Live
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and YouTube TV. They're the highest
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rated live TV services. And there's a
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big satisfaction loss for ESPN Plus,
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which is being folded into the new ESPN
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app. You may have heard about Peacock's
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price hike by now, but there's something
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else I'm watching with this service.
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First, those pricing details. Peacock
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raised the price of its premium and
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premium plus plans by $3 a month, so now
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11 and $17. Annual plans, they went up
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to 30 bucks. There's also this new
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select tier being tested for $8 a month
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with NBC, Bravo, and library content
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only. So, no sports. And this price
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increase comes as Peacock leans more
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heavily into live sports, including NBA,
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that starts this fall. One of my viewers
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was right to flag this. The question is,
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will Peacock start running more ads?
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Even after raising the price, $3 a
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month. So, here's what we know. Live
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Sports, no matter what plan you're on,
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will include some ads. And when Peacock
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launched back in 2020, it said the ad
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supported plan would have no more than 5
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minutes of ads per hour. That was a long
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time ago. So, I put it to the test
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watching an hour of a dine episode. And
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there were a lot of ads. When I added it
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all up, the total ad time came out to 8
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and 1/2 minutes. One pre-show ad, then
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seven breaks, 19 different ads. No
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repeats, though. and ads that range
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between 15 and 75 seconds long. And when
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I stopped the timer at 1 hour, another
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break was just starting. I know it's
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just a 1-hour test, but this did
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surprise me. The level of ads, it's more
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in line with Hulu and Paramount Plus,
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two of the most adheavy streaming
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services. So, comment below. Let me know
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your experience with Peacock's ads. Now,
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to this, the Paramount Skyance merger
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gained FCC approval. and finally closes
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this month with more cost cutting
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expected to follow. Leading up to the
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merger, CBS cancelled the late show and
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since then there have been questions
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about Late Night in general with ratings
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and profits both down. I'm not here to
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talk about the politics of it all, but I
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do want to focus on the one group that
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nobody seems to be talking about.
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They're the big losers in all this, and
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that's the local TV stations serving
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your community. And you probably already
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know most local TV stations are not
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owned by the broadcast TV networks.
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They're affiliates and they've got
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business deals with the networks to
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provide programming. Everyone's noticed
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the network programming has declined in
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recent years. Just look at prime time
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reality and game shows. They've replaced
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dramas and sitcoms. The best shows have
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now moved to streaming. And whatever
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replaces the late show, we don't know
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what that is yet. It's unlikely to be
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better for the affiliates. I spent a
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decade producing local news, so I know
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stations rely on strong network
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programming to drive viewers to their
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newscasts. And the bottom line, the
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erosion of the network lineup, it's
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giving people fewer reasons to tune in
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at all. The broadcast TV networks are
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cutting back everywhere. Well, except
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for sports. They're still spending big
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on NFL rights and other live events.
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It's their survival strategy, but it
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doesn't solve the bigger problem for
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local stations. Just this month, two
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major market local stations are going
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independent, ending long-term
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relationships with networks. One in
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Miami, another in Atlanta, and likely
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more to come. Give me a minute and I'll
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get you caught up on three stories that
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you may have missed. First up, Exfinity
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has launched a new hub to manage all
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your streaming apps in one place. Sounds
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good. It's called Stream Store and it
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gives customers access to over 450 apps
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and channels. Plus, bundles are there,
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too. Like Streamsaver. That one's
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already pretty popular. Apple TV,
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Netflix, and Peacock. $15 a month. You
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can say goodbye to Freebie if you
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haven't already. Amazon is officially
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shutting down the standalone app, but
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the content is not going away. You can
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still watch it free inside Prime Video,
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even without a Prime membership. There's
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a push toward premium with Verizon 5G
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home internet's new plans. You may think
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features like 4K video and unlimited
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premium data should be standard, but
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they are not included with the base
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plan. You'll have to pay more for them,
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as well as streaming perks. I've got a
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separate video that digs deeper into
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this trend and whether 5G home internet
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plans are the best value. The other day,
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a friend sent me this article about
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HGTV. Thought I'd share it with you
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here. This one is from Deadline. I'll
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have a link to it below. And it says
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HGTV is trying to reinvent itself after
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losing nearly half of its audience in
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the last 8 years. The network's problems
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are not just about ratings, though. This
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report says some HGTV renovation shows
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cost half a million dollars per episode
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to produce. HGTV has been cancelling a
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lot of shows lately. This article sheds
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light on some of the reasons why HGTV is
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still a top cable network and it's
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included in a lot of the must-have
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channel list that I see from viewers. If
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you're one of them, I'm working on a
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video for later this month that is just
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for you. This is the original monthly
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streaming update. I help you save money
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without wasting your time.