Episode Details
Back to Episodes#859: Fun Dental Facts For the 4th of July
Description
This episode is for those who want a good time. Happy Fourth of July!
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Transcript:
Kiera Dent (00:00.654)
Hello, Dental A Team Listeners. This is Kiera and happy 4th of July. You all know that if you've been listening for a while, know how much I love holidays and I am so grateful to live in America. I truly feel so blessed to live in a country where me, especially as a woman, is able to have a business and to be able to serve and to be able to live the way I do. And I understand that there are politics and different things that maybe aren't right per se, but I think overall I am just so grateful.
to live in a country that allows me to live and be the person that I want to be. So happy 4th of July to all of you. And today I thought I'd get on with actually a super fun podcast for you. So this is coming from DentistMidtownAtlanta .com. So I've got to give credit because this is not me. Shout out to these doctors and I hope that they are a listening dentist like listener because if you are reach out, mad kudos to you. Literally pulled up. I was like, what am I going to do that would be fun for you guys?
that would just make today as a 4th of July a good time. And so what they have is they actually wrote back fun dental facts for the 4th of July. Like I said, I cannot take any credit of this because I'm literally reading it off of a website. So this is not Kiera Dent. This is not Dental A Team. But I did think it'd be a good time for you guys to hear some amazing 4th of July holiday festival things that are dental specific. So number one, from 19... Excuse me, 1768 to 1770.
the infamous Paul Revere. He went into local newspapers offering his services as a dentist. I had no clue that Paul Revere was a dentist. A few years later, Revere verifies the death of his friend by identifying a bridge he constructed for him. This was the first known case of postmortem dental forensics. I had no idea. So maybe you guys all know that and I'm just new to the dental scene. But that was 1768 to 1770. In 1