There's been a lot of good discussion here already, so I'm going to try to just address a few things that I think have been overlooked...
First off: Stack Overflow has never been the sort of site you're yearning for.
Purely in terms of questions asked, Stack Overflow has been bigger than EL&U since very early in the private beta. When I signed on for the first time on August 9, 2008 it was already getting more questions per day than EL&U gets now. By the time it was opened up to the general public, it was already getting more questions than Super User gets today, and that number increased dramatically with the occurrence of the miracle. It was possible to stay informed of most questions in a particular tag, but... Well, I had a link to a tag-search query saved in my browser toolbar that I would click, obsessively, throughout the day in order to accomplish this. After a few months of this, even that became impractical.
The site has never been limited to "high brow" questions. My oldest still-visible answer is on a question that, if asked today, would probably be dumped on by folks like yourself for being too specific to the asker's website, not showing any code, etc. There were tons of these, even very early on.
The site wasn't even particularly useful for a good 6-9 months (in my opinion). Oh, it was fun - there were novel questions to answer, idle discussions and polls to waste time in, and plenty of interesting answers to read - but it took a fair bit of growth before it reached the scale where, if I had a specific problem I was working on, I was likely to find the answer on SO - or even someone with expertise in the area who might answer such a question. Building a knowledge base for a topic as broad and deep as "all programming tasks in any language on every platform, ever" is not the sort of task that lends itself to a small group of people pitching in in their spare time. I remember the first time I was researching a problem and saw relevant topics on Stack Overflow popping up in the search results - it was in 2009, and suddenly I thought, "Hey - this might actually work".
All that being said, I understand where you're coming from. See, the problem with a community as large as that on Stack Overflow is... It isn't really a community anymore. You can't have a cohesive group with 2.4 million people in it; that just doesn't happen. Communities are built around a few people talking to a few other people, building a shared understanding that unites them - you simply don't get that much overlap in a group this large. So as the group grows, it branches and subdivides, repeatedly, as-needed to preserve cohesive communities within (or breaking off from) the larger whole. On Stack Exchange, you can observe this in a few different forms:
Folks leaving and going to other sites. Those who were here for open-ended discussions left for Reddit, HackerNews, Quora, and others.
The creation of new sites on tangential topics. There are 106 sites making up Stack Exchange now, most of them fairly small, and nearly all of them started at least in part by folks who began on Stack Overflow.
Tag-specific cultures. While there is certainly a lot of overlap between different tags, taken as groups the folks answering PHP questions are not the same as the folks answering C++ questions or C# questions or R questions or Android questions. And I'm not talking about programming knowledge or day jobs. Each subgroup has different attitudes and strategies, and they may interact with the site in very different ways.
If you're thinking to yourself, "But I don't want to live in a PHP ghetto, I want to be a member of Stack Overflow!" well, I hear ya. But drinking from the firehose every day will wear you out in no time flat. I had to take a pretty long break from the network at one point, and when I came back it was to participate on a much smaller site. Why? Because by the end I was spending most of my time on SO looking at the worst of the worst questions, and it was becoming incredibly demoralizing: it ruined my attitude toward even the folks who were trying to do a good job, and gave me a fairly negative impression of the site as a whole. When features I wanted - needed - weren't implemented, and tools I used were taken away, I felt crushed. Because that's what happens when you try to play Atlas.
So what's to be done then? Well...
If you really want a small, EL&U sized site with (on average) more interesting questions, check out Programmers. Forget about its long-abandoned "fluffy question" past; it's actually pretty close to what you're after, and the community there is fairly hard-core about keeping it that way. While an even smaller site, Code Review is another break-off site that focuses specifically on improvements to already-working code - this also tends to result in a somewhat better average quality level, and could be a welcome diversion from the "fix my code" questions you're frustrated with.
If you just want to see decent questions that've been overlooked, use search! It's become quite powerful, and can easily show you reasonable, unanswered, overlooked questions in your tag or tags of choice. I'm barely scratching the surface with that query, but there are all sorts of nobs to turn that'll handily give you as many or as few questions as you might wish for.
If it's all just too discouraging, take a break! I find Stack Overflow a lot more interesting when I'm not buried knee-deep in close-flagged posts every day. If it's something you want to love, don't spend your time fixated on the worst aspects of it - if that means just walking away entirely for a month or two in order to break some harmful habits, so be it.
There's no denying, at its current scale Stack Overflow faces some incredible challenges - but it also holds an incredible amount of potential for good because of that scale. Let's do our best to meet the former without giving up on the latter...