While sitting in her St. Paul dentist's office waiting to get a crown, Paula Engelking witnessed a contentious scene.
Another patient asked the receptionist to switch the TV to Channel 41.
"I said, 'What station is that?' and the guy said, 'Fox News.' Another woman sitting there goes, 'No. No!' very emphatic," said Engelking of St Louis Park. "Then someone else spoke up against it. It was a flare-up moment — a revolt right there in the waiting room."
Even in the age of cellphones, most reception rooms continue to offer an assortment of magazines and a TV to alleviate the boredom of a captive audience. But which channel that TV is playing has become yet another battleground in our increasingly divisive world.
With the touch of a remote, medical clinics, bars, restaurants, fitness centers, hotels, car dealerships and auto repair shops can find themselves pulled into a partisan tug-of-war. News programs, in particular, have become flash points.
"There's a lot of finger-pointing and name-calling about news that some see as biased," said Pamela Rutledge, a psychologist and director of the Media Psychology Research Center. "Playing politics is a time bomb waiting to go off."
Forgoing televisions altogether is an option few companies have embraced — especially since streaming programming now allows them to air custom content that dovetails with their products or promotes their services.
Steve's Tire and Auto in south Minneapolis runs a loop of downloaded video content for customers killing time while their cars are being serviced. It features humorous bits from popular sitcoms interspersed with informational videos on car maintenance.