So the streaming providers will ultimately have the same costs and conditions (must show channels no one wants to get popular channels, etc.) as cable and satellite did. I think ultimately, it will take something like MP3 pirating did to the Music industry to force the content provider's hands.
Maybe the coming shake out of live TV and on demand streaming providers will address some of this. No way all these subscription, streaming providers will survive. HBO Go, CBS All Access, NBC Peacock, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Fubo, Flo, Philo, Vudu, Vue (RIP), Hulu, Hulu+Live, Youtube, YoutubeTV, Apple TV+, Google Play Movies, NBC Peacock, ESPN+, Disney+, Sling, AT&T TV Now, Showtime, Roku Channel, cable providers, satellite providers, and the list goes on and on and on.
Who survives? How does it all shake out with content providers? We can only hope we eventually get a fair market price to only watch the channels and content (games) we want, when we want to. Just like MP3's then music streaming services revolutionized the music industry from forcing us to buy albums full of songs we didn't like to get the good ones.