I let the cable go about 5yr ago. Only thing I really miss is Turner Classic Movies.
MTV doesn't show music, ESPN shows poker tournaments, the Weather Channel stops showing the weather for 12 hours a day so they can show the Shuttle Challenger explosion 72 times, and people dying in floods. The Cartoon Network started showing bad cartoons, and when the bad cartoons got bad ratings, they decided to show bad copies of live-action Disney & Nickleodeon shows instead of cartoons.
Any decent network series will be on DVD eventually, and without all the stupid graphics over the top of it telling you how "THE GREATEST SHOW IN THE WORLD WILL BE ON THIS FRIDAY!!!"
I don't even tell people I work in TV anymore, since the first thing out of their mouth is "..can you do anything about all that crap on the screen?.."
Our "ghetto home theatre" is an old Mitsubishi VHS player with two video inputs. One's connected to the roomie's xBox360 (which connects to Netflix-and also plays DVDs), and the other's connected to a Playstation2, so we can play our older games when we're not watching movies or playing xBox games. The PS2 will probably be replaced by a PS3 once Gran Turismo 5 comes out..
We don't miss television. As someone who works in the (cable) TV industry, I can't help but see the similarities with the "death" of FM radio twenty-five or so years ago as big companies bought up all the local stations, abandoned their "niche" audiences, and started chasing market share by attempting to appeal to the mass market. When the quality of programming decreased, everyone just went out and bought a cassette player (nowdays, CDs of course..
) for the car. Fewer people listen to radio now than since it was invented, and the last stations standing just fight over the last little puddle of listeners.
Same thing's going on right now in TV. When I first disconnected five years ago, people thought it was weird. Nowdays, people like me seem to be everywhere. I'm hoping my company is still flexible enough to adjust, otherwise, I'll be out of a job.
How can it be a midlife crisis, when I've driven sportscars my entire life?