
There's where the faux a la carte feeling comes in.

You'll mostly find different channels in each, though there are a handful of common channels. Those two Sling TV plans - tracks, whatever - are Sling Orange and Sling Blue. They split off at first but also intermingle a bit. Yes, you can call them plans, but it's almost easier to think of them as the two main trunks of a rather large tree. Here's the gist of Sling TV: there are two main tracks. View (opens in new tab) Sling TV channels: the Sling Orange and Sling Blue plans
SLING TV ACCOUNT TRIAL
Don't forget, although the Sling TV free trial has stopped, there's a great deal for new customers which means you can try it out for half the normal price ($17.50, instead of $35) for the first month. You'll also need to keep track of the Sling TV plan you're building because it's easy to rack up the costs and end up spending as much as you would with any of the other streaming services. Sling TV's flexibility is both good and bad - the channel options are numerous, but you'll have to do a little homework to make sure you're getting the channels you want. Sign up for a Sling TV subscription (opens in new tab).One of the reasons for that is that the Sling TV base packages are among the most affordable - with a mix of channels that are as close to a la carte TV as you can get. Today, however, it's a shiny, modern TV streaming service and one of the most popular in the United States.
Its roots lie in the ability to watch your cable feed from anywhere in the world - you'd literally plug your cable line into a Sling box, which would then spit out the feed online. Sling TV is the grandfather of the streaming industry.
