Youtube, bitchute, lbry or whatever it is called this week and all the rest (though dailymotion, Vimeo and most of the other "old guard" of youtube alternatives are zombies as far as I am concerned, mostly only good by virtue of being where a lot of people reshare content youtube deemed too non PC and the creators of such things did not think to have a bitchute account to mirror things to) have long since become my video entertainment channels of choice. Closest I have come to a streaming service is someone's house had Amazon so I watched The Boys on that, have watched Netflix for the first and only time a few months ago to see basically a music video, and many years earlier I was on Amazon's DVD rental by post service mainly because I had no TV and no internet at my house. Have done a bit with Channel 4's service mind you.
On those I can watch hours of in depth footage on anything I am interested in, something that would almost never have appeared on TV* and when it was it was still watered down and aimed at the the broadest possible audience, and never inclined to offend anybody.
*I like woodwork for instance and I am old enough to have caught New Yankee Workshop on TV back when. Loved it. Guy is still a legend to this day and I doubt any woodworker around at the time will argue otherwise. Tried watching it after watching various youtube channels but it is harder, though more of that is because I still remember it. Same for history shows -- I have battleplan on DVD that I bought new, give or take youtube's desire to throttle such content then
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheImperatorKnight/videos?disable_polymer=1 does far better still.
An older acquaintance came up to me a while back and was excited about some general restoration show on TV. For some reason I was looking at TV ratings as well and it is actually seriously highly rated. However I can watch hours, and have watched hours in the limited amount my browser history is kept for, on machine tools, hand tools, cars, guns, jewellery that go into why they are doing everything in serious depth all whilst not having to keep to a time slot -- if 10 minutes is needed then 10 minutes is taken, if 30 is needed then 30 is taken (content density I believe is a phrase I heard and quite like here).
Obviously I like games so earlier today I watched a 1h:37 retrospective on the dino crisis series, at double speed because I don't have two hours when I could be doing it in one. Can also still find some game content with a sense of humour as well, which I am not sure anything other than Digitiser on TV (and that was a teletext service. By the way they are still doing stuff
https://www.digitiser2000.com/ ) and maybe whatever Dominic Diamond (the good episodes of Gamesmaster, also occasionally still doing things) managed to slip past the censors ever had.
If I want to watch/learn/keep reasonably up to date on trades then I can do that too
Was not only highly amusing but was a nice example of worked external earthing systems which I needed to get current on again, though I can have just as dry as I need in the right length as well.
So yeah any of my interests (tools, engineering, chemistry, physics, history and history of anything else on this list, maths, economics, guns, psychology, medicine, skateboarding, cooking, woodwork, electronics, retrospectives on cartoons/films/games/sports, gaming, philosophy, long form discussion from interesting people I might not have ever otherwise sought out, literary discussion...) I can not only find but find better than anything I have ever seen on TV and ever expect to see on TV.
Short version.
I stopped doing live TV about 16 years ago (moved somewhere, didn't fancy paying TV tax so went without), and in more recent ones since have stopped even grabbing it in DVD (usually second hand for pennies) or (ahem) form in favour of user made stuff. At this point... actually better example might be I went on
http://www.pogdesign.co.uk/cat/ the other month just to see what was going on and recognised almost nothing airing these days.
Piracy and streaming services won't be the thing to kill TV. Their long march into irrelevance will be what does that.