Your YouTube TV bill is going up again. Here's why it hits different here.
So everyone's talking about YouTube TV dropping its cheaper plans and changing their streaming tiers. Nationally, it's just another price hike, another streaming service playing games with your money. But here in Washington, D.C., it’s not just about a few extra dollars. This city lives and dies by what’s happening in the news, by the endless cycle of political drama and global events. We’re glued to CNN, to MSNBC, to Fox News, because what happens on those screens directly impacts our lives — from the federal government shutdowns that hold our paychecks hostage to the constant talk about D.C. statehood that barely makes national headlines.
When you're trying to keep up with what Congress is doing, or trying to understand the latest international crisis from your apartment in Shaw or your rowhouse in Petworth, that YouTube TV bill isn't a luxury; it's a necessity. We're not just streaming for entertainment; we're streaming for information, for a sense of what's coming next. And for a lot of folks in the DMV, especially those who’ve been here for generations and are already feeling the squeeze of gentrification pushing them out of their neighborhoods, every price increase is a slap in the face. It’s another barrier to staying informed, another reminder that even the digital world seems to forget that people here are just trying to make it, trying to stay connected. That's the District, DMV — no vote, all heart.
My folks on the Morning Wire team are breaking this down right now — catch the real talk live at mornings.live.