Does anyone else see this when switching channels? I've noticed the last couple of years with Dish that the image quality as I go from channel to channel varies widely, and even from commercial to commercial on the same channel. For instance, switching between the Patriots game and a game show on ABC and then bopping over to CNN tonight, they all had what seemed to essentially be very obviously different picture settings. And to be clear, I'm not talking about compression artifacts. I know what those are and how some channels have more than others. What I see is that some channels look dim, like I'm looking through slightly tinted glass. The image looks grey and flat. But no amount of increasing the brightness or contrast or color saturation fixes it. It still looks greyish, but brighter with ridiculously blown out colors. Then another channel doesn't seem to have any blacks and looks like a photoshop image that has had way too much shadow and overexposure correction. Another doesn't seem to have a rich palette of colors. Another has a yellowish hue to it. I calibrate my tv to CNN and other broadcast news which looks as close to reality as possible. Some channels look fine. Others look like hell. I've dabbled in video production so I know that some producers export bad video quality, but not an NFL game! I wonder if I've got a bad Hopper. Or is DISH compressing things so much now that they strip out colors and other parts of the video signal to save bandwidth which then accentuates problems? I am running the picture and image from the Hopper through Denon 4810 to a 2016 model year Samsung 75" tv (entry level line) on HDMIs. Yes I know a tv that size reveals a lot of image problems. I had the same issue on a 2013 Samsung. It was the same size. Anyone else seeing this? It is driving me nuts!