transmit5by9 said:
It's best to go to the service's individual web site and plug in your zip code to find out about local service. In Waco (767_ _), ABC, CBS, and NBC are all shown on all the services.. YMMV.
Also, if your TV is reasonably new (10 years or younger) it should have a built in digital tuner. A $20ish antenna will pick up your local (up to 30 miles or so) network stations. Two advantages to doing this are A. better picture quality and B. if your internet goes out you'll have TV service.
I can tell you that in 76710, PSVue provides ABC, CBS, NBC, and FOX in its package.
Now, transmit5x9 makes an interesting point
I'm a tinkerer at heart, so when I cut the cord, I giddily installed an outdoor TV antenna on the roof. At the time, local stations weren't being offered under any streaming service by rule (this has obviously changed). I used it as an excuse to buy a silly sized Antennas Direct DB-8 70mi 8-element antenna. That's a lot of words to say I bought something that looks like a 1950's era Marvin the Martian rig.
What you need to know about outdoor antennas (OTA for "over the air") is that they're not analog style rabbit ears type things. "Antenna" to most of us means "grainy picture that might work depending on the weather and direction". That is 100% NOT how modern TV signals are transmitted!
If you use an OTA antenna, the picture is either dead perfect or not there at all. There is no "grainy" or "snowy". That's because the TV station is broadcasting (and you antenna is receiving) pure digital data. Your TV set's tuner grabs this data and assembles it into a picture. When it locks on to a data signal, it's a perfect picture. If it doesn't lock on, there's NO picture. There is no in-between.
Here's the kicker to consider. When the cable company sends you ABC's picture (or any other channel), they have to make concessions. There's a lot of channels to send, and they only have so much space to send them all on. Consequently, each channel has to be "compressed", or limited in order to fit them all in. They are all sent at once, so everything has to be compressed.
An OTA antenna does not have that restriction. When the local ABC affiliate transmits its ABC picture, it fires it off in all of its uncompressed glory. It doesn't care because its only sending one thing. Your TV tuner will grab that one signal and display it to you. If you change the channel, it will grab that new signal and display it to you! It doesn't have to choose.
The takeaway from all of this is, even while a lot of streaming packages now include local channels, you'll be amazed at how much clearer those channels are when viewing via OTA antenna.