What do you personally use to consume media?

I’m the opposite of a cord cutter. I’ve had the same cable account for nearly 20 years. I also have most of the streaming services: Netflix, Hulu, HBO, Amazon Prime, CBS All Access and even PBS, which offers a $5-a-month app.

I’ll toggle from the Yankees game on my cable feed to the Netflix app on my Roku box to binge “Derry Girls” (it’s great) while scrolling through Twitter on my phone.

And for media geeks like me, HBO’s “Succession” is everything. The second season really shines. I have a few quibbles, but I’m amazed by its vivid accuracy. Plus, witness Sunday Night Twitter, when broadcasting your favorite lines becomes its own piece of theater.

How has streaming changed the media industry?

Streaming is both a reaction to and a cause of cord cutting, but really it just means more content. It’s worth noting that for all of tech’s disruptions, Apple and Amazon are now in the business of producing what is essentially cable television. Google and Facebook, too. You have to wonder when one of them will just buy a media company.

I’m not saying it’ll happen, but there were nearly $200 billion in history-making media mergers in the past year. All the big ones are done. The next one — if there is to be one — will be a tech giant swallowing a media giant. The irony is that media merged to take on tech, but it’s one possible outcome.