I agree with Kal and Al, especially with a high-quality baseband video or digital interconnect. However, if "75-ohm" means common CATV RG6 with crimped-on ends, then yes, this can very commonly be problematic . . . but this is not because of its 75-ohm impedance.
CATV RG6 and its connectors are optimized for frequencies above 50MHz, and are almost universally manufactured with the shield being aluminum foil in combination with partial-coverage aluminum-braid. This shield, in combined with the crimped-on connectors, leads to a much higher ground resistance than a good copper interconnect with soldered connectors. This might mean a couple ohms or more of resistance as opposed to a 1/10th ohm . . .
. . . which still doesn't seem like much, but if you have any ground-leakage current flowing from the AV receiver to the third-prong ground on the subwoofer (very common in a real-world installation) this can cause lots of hum, or switch-mode power-supply noise in the audio. Same goes for making hum bars appear in a baseband (i.e. component) video run across CATV RG6.
I bring this up because it seems that many "custom installation" companies use RG6 for just about everything, because it's a single kind of cable to keep on the truck, and damn near anybody can be trained to crimp on an RG6-style connector in well under 30 seconds.