Tom, Brian, and Amos turn the streaming TV maze into a map: platforms, bundles, live TV replacements, FAST channels, library freebies, and the subscriptions you forgot you still had.
Streaming Platforms
Platforms collect subscriptions in one place, usually through one bill and one app. Roku, Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, Google TV/YouTube, Walmart+, DirecTV Stream, Sling TV, YouTube TV, and cable-provider apps can all act as your main streaming “bucket.”
The advice: pick one bucket if you can. It makes cancellation sweeps easier and helps avoid paying for services you are not using.
Amazon Prime Video has the most add-on choice, Apple TV has strong subscription management, YouTube TV works well for live TV plus premium add-ons, Roku is budget-friendly, Sling TV is customizable, and DirecTV Stream is the cable-like sports-heavy option.
Links: Roku, Prime Video, Apple TV, Google TV, Walmart+, YouTube TV, Sling TV, DirecTV Stream
Discovery and Audits
JustWatch, FreeCast, Plex, Apple TV search, and Roku search can help find where something is streaming. AI finance tools can also help identify forgotten subscriptions.
Links: JustWatch, FreeCast, Plex
Bundles
Bundles are smaller collections of services, often offered directly or through a phone, internet, or retail membership perk. Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN remain a major bundle. Peacock offers an Apple TV bundle, while T-Mobile, Verizon, Cricket Wireless, Metro by T-Mobile, and Google Fi include streaming perks on some plans.
Brian gets HBO Max through a legacy AT&T Fiber perk and uses T-Mobile benefits for Netflix and Apple TV+. Amos uses Verizon for the Disney Bundle and Walmart+ for Paramount+ or Peacock.
The warning: bundles save money, but canceling a phone or internet plan may mean losing perks you rely on.
Links: Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+, Peacock, T-Mobile, Verizon, Google Fi
Live TV Replacements
Internet-based live TV services provide linear channels without traditional cable installation or long contracts. Options include YouTube TV, DirecTV Stream, Hulu + Live TV, Fubo, Philo, Frndly TV, and Sling TV.
Tom uses DirecTV Stream for sports and specific channels. Brian does not currently rely on a paid live TV replacement. Amos uses an antenna with HDHomeRun and Plex for broadcast TV, which comes up more in the hardware special.
Links: Hulu + Live TV, Fubo, Philo, Frndly TV, HDHomeRun
FAST and Library Streaming
FAST services are free ad-supported streaming TV, often built around always-on channel grids. Pluto TV, Xumo, Tubi, Prime Video Free Streaming, Samsung TV Plus, The Roku Channel, Zeam, Plex, and Sling Freestream are all options.
Tom and Brian call FAST “waterfall television”: familiar, low-pressure programming you can leave on without thinking too hard. Kanopy and Hoopla are also worth checking through your local library.
Links: Pluto TV, Xumo, Tubi, Samsung TV Plus, Roku Channel, Zeam, Kanopy, Hoopla
Part two covers streaming hardware. Feedback: [email protected]
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