Also my daily driver is 55 years old.
OK, I'll bite - what kind of car is your 1963? (If I had a garage, the oldest car I'd drive would be a '67 because that was the year energy-absorbing steering columns became standard equipment.)
As for VHS tapes, I've been throwing them out lately - but selectively. For example, 25 years ago I taped the "Ve ... made it!" segment of "By Any Other Name" (my favorite few minutes of that episode) and I'm keeping it because the only version easily viewable today (unless I want to purchase an early DVD) is the remastered one, where unfortunately they made the distant Andromeda galaxy much too large.
But can occasionally be unreliable, where signal strength can vary, where licences to stream a show can end and the series you thought you paid for and "owned" suddenly disappears from your service... to me, it was never an either/or proposition between streaming and physical media. Streaming to me was (and has proven to be) always a replacement for the movie hiring library, it's the easy option for weekend viewing, but there will always be a market there for people who love a TV showor movie so much they want to actually own a version of it. Physical media is reliable, as long as the machinery exists to play it on. The two formats (streaming and physical media) don't have to be in competition, because they're both servicing different markets. 

