25 years ago the BBC was still producing original comedy, whereas ITV seemed to be concentrating on increasing the frequency of soaps (ITV were still producing great dramas 25 years ago and even today I think their dramas are much better than the BBC’s drama output).
Forward to today and both channels seem intent on showing as many quiz shows and reality TV programmes as possible. One recent Saturday evening’s TV viewing had a total of 6 hours of quizzes across both channels.
The BBC in particular seems intent with showing cookery programmes at peak times, and quite a large number of them too (there’s 90 minutes of cookery on BBC2 tonight).
It’s all personal choice and everyone is different. I agree with others that the BBC is not as good as it was in the past but I find it difficult to believe that someone should feel there’s not a single programme on iPlayer worth watching. I don’t watch soaps, reality programmes etc but I do think the BBC still produces some good documentaries and drama.
As I said it’s all personal choice. I tried Netflix and gave up after a few months because there was very little on there that I liked. So much seemed too American for me. I used to have Sky until I realised that around 90% of what was in my planner was from the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 & 5. I used to go through the Sky Channels and find nothing I wanted to watch. For the last 6 months I have subscribed to Britbox and I find so much, what I consider quality British tv from the past 40 years there, and I am spoilt for choice.
It's fairly unlikely that there's nothing that someone who thinks TV in the past was good, as there's quite a lot of older shows available to watch.
Depending on your vintage and taste there's:
Ab Fab
Auf Wiedersehen Pet
The Catherine Tate Show
Dad's Army
Fanny Cradock cooks for Christmas
The Fresh Prince of Belair
How they dug the Victoria Line (1969)
Jonathan Creek
My Family
Old Grey Whistle Test
One foot in the Grave
Porridge (original as well as the 2017 version)
The Thin Blue Line
Many on the above are several series worth and I've excluded things where there's only one episode (like The Two Ronnies and Yes Minister).
There's several programs on railways, cooking, wildlife, history, music, classic interviews (for examplea few with Frost), etc.
There's over 200 listings under "a" and that not counting each episode as 1 item, rather (as an example) the whole of Ab Fab (several series worth) as one item.
As such the likelihood of there being nothing at all that someone would wish to watch is fairly unlikely
Now whether someone thinks it's worth paying the license fee for is another matter.