My total costs for paid content are $5 Hulu, $5 Netflix (bought with annual promos), $0 Amazon Prime (again, promos and the cost of shipping since I buy from Amazon all the time, Amazon Prime is a savings not a cost).
YouTube is free, torrenting is free (more people need to learn to use this if serious about cord cutting - use your HTPC).
If you add in my IPTV services, I am paying for League Pass, Reborn4HDLive, and an IKS IPTV service for testing purposes. I won't count all of that, but I think having one there is fair and if I had to pick one it would be Reborn4HDLive ($18/mo?).
So, all in all, I'm paying $28/mo total for my non-cable television services.
The only reason that I still have cable is for the Asian channels and that's it. And really only one Asian channel in particular since there is no cheap IPTV source that I have found that includes it, unfortunately. If I could find this one channel, I would instantly discontinue my service from Charter.
With respect to internet service. I'm a power-user and I run my entire business through the internet; I also use torrents quite a bit. Yet my internet service through T-Mobile (which is unlimited and unthrottled) is about 40Mbps in the East L.A./Pasadena area. That is incredibly fast. Great ping times etc. If I needed to, I could simply use T-Mobile for all of my internet requirements. I've done this before when living in Maui, and travelling overseas; I've never had a problem from T-Mobile with respect to my data usage (generally between 30-50 GB/mo, sometimes more)
Otherwise, I could go with Verizon's FiOS which is in my area (AFAIK) and starts at $49.99/mo for a 50/5 connection, which is essentially what I have now except wouldn't be shared with my neighbors and is really more than enough.
Hope that helps anyone looking to cut the cord.
p.s.
If you don't have a real HTPC, I strongly suggest you make/purchase one. It will change how you address this question. I personally use my work laptop as my HTPC.
I have a make-shift laptop dock on my TV "stand" (it's wall-mounted), so when I come home, I can simply set my laptop in the dock, and boom, I'm ready to go. I scripted it so that when it docks (HDMI in use), it'll automatically start up the media services applications and I can go from there. It's pretty slick, and is only missing the cable input portion of the HTPC setup - but since I don't watch TV shows in general, I don't really give a fuck about that.