Peter Jepsen
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Author | Marguerite Henry |
---|---|
Illustrator | Wesley Dennis |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Publisher | Rand McNally (1953) Aladdin (1991) |
Publication date | November 1953[1] |
Pages | 222 |
ISBN | 978-0-689-71485-6 (second printing) |
OCLC | 305533 |
Brighty of the Grand Canyon | |
---|---|
Directed by | Norman Foster |
Produced by | Stephen F. Booth for Stephen F. Booth Productions |
Screenplay by | Norman Foster |
Based on | Brighty of the Grand Canyon by Marguerite Henry |
Starring | Joseph Cotten Pat Conway Dick Foran Karl Swenson Dandy Curran |
Music by | Phyllis Lavsky Richard Lavsky |
Cinematography | Ted Saizis Vincent Saizis |
Edited by | Joseph Dervin |
Distributed by | Feature Film Corporation of America |
Release date | |
Running time | 89 minutes |
Language | English |
Brighty of the Grand Canyon is a 1953 children's novel by Marguerite Henry and a 1966 film of the same name based on the novel. They present a fictionalized account of a real-life burro named 'Brighty', who lived in the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River from about 1892 to 1922.[2]
History[edit]
Brighty first appears in the annals of history in 1890 in Flagstaff, Arizona, in the possession of two men who were on their way to the Grand Canyon. He is next recorded on the South Rim where he and his owners were seen to enter the Canyon via the Bright Angel Trail. Shortly after that two herdsmen entered the canyon to attempt to find the remains of an earlier drowning victim along the Colorado. Instead, they found a camp at the confluence of the Colorado and Bright Angel Creek that was abandoned with the exception of Brighty. It appeared that the two men had saddled and ridden their horses down to and into the Colorado wherein they presumably drowned. Their identities were never determined and their bodies were never recovered.[3]
Originally named 'Bright Angel' after a creek that flowed into the Grand Canyon from his summer dwelling on the North Rim, Brighty spent summers carrying water from a spring below the rim to accommodate tourists coming to the Canyon. He was gentle and popular with children.[4]
Brighty was the first to cross the suspension bridge built over the Colorado River at the base of the canyon, having assisted with building of the structure. The burro accompanied U.S. PresidentTheodore Roosevelt while he hunted mountain lions.[5] (The role of Roosevelt is portrayed in the film by Karl Swenson.)[6]
Book and film[edit]
Henry penned her novel after she read an article about Brighty in Sunset Magazine. It won the 1956 William Allen White Children's Book Award.
Thomas McKee, the former manager of Wiley's Camp on the North Rim of the Canyon, read Henry's novel and wrote to express his interest in the book. McKee told Henry that his son, Bob, was Brighty's closest companion. He sent Henry a photograph of young Bob McKee sitting on Brighty's back. The youngster became the composite character Homer Hobbs,[5] played in the film by Dandy Curran.[7]
The other film characters include Old Timer, a prospector played by Dick Foran, and Uncle Jim Owen, a man of the Old West played by Joseph Cotten.[7]Pat Conway appears as Jake Irons, who murders Old Timer for his copper ore. Uncle Jim then proceeds to help bring Irons to justice.[8] Parts of the film were shot at the Colorado River in Utah and the Grand Canyon in Arizona.[9]
Brighty's monument[edit]
Brighty is honored with a bronze statue in the lobby of Grand Canyon Lodge,[10] a National Historic Landmark,[11] located near Arizona State Route 67 approximately 43 miles south of the junction with U.S. Route 89 alternate route. The sculpture is by artist Peter Jepsen.[12]The monument of stone walls and timbers has a memorial inscription written by Marguerite Henry: 'the artist captured the soul of Brighty, forever wild, forever free.'[5]
Park visitors frequently stroke the nose of Brighty for good luck, and the statue's 'muzzle is polished by thousands of hands'.[13]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Independent Burro; BRIGHTY OF THE GRAND CANYON. By Marguerite Henry. Illustrated by Wesley Dennis. 222 pp. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co. $2.95'. New York Times. 1953-11-15. p. BRA34.
- ^Henry, Marguerite (1953). Brighty: Of the Grand Canyon. ISBN0689714858.
- ^Ghiglieri, M. P. & Myers, T. M., 2001: Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon, Puma Press, Flagstaff. Ed. 1, Rev. 11, pp 184-185
- ^Henry, Marguerite (1953). Brighty of the Grand Canyon by Marguerite Henry. ISBN9780689714856. Retrieved January 19, 2010.
- ^ abc'Brighty of the Grand Canyon (film and novel)'. horsefame.tripod.com. Retrieved January 19, 2010.
- ^'In Memory of Karl Swenson (1908-1978)'. zunshine.com. Retrieved January 18, 2010.
- ^ ab'Brighty of the Grand Canyon'. Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved January 19, 2010.
- ^'Overview for Brighty of the Grand Canyon'. tcm.com. Retrieved January 19, 2010.
- ^D'Arc, James V. (2010). When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah (1st ed.). Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith. ISBN9781423605874.
- ^'National Register Information System'. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^'Grand Canyon Lodge'. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2009-08-02. Retrieved 2010-02-01.
- ^Lago, Don (2014). Canyon of dreams : stories from Grand Canyon history. University of Utah Press. pp. 174f. ISBN9781607813156.
- ^Van Rheenen, Erin. 'The Life and Times of Brighty, the Grand Canyon's Most Legendary Burro; He was a muse, a good luck charm, and the center of a controversy over invasive species.'. AtlasObscura.com. Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
A decade ago, Peter Jepsen was an EPT champion, an admired high-stakes online poker pro, and even a sponsored pro at various times with Betfair, Ladbrokes, and Full Tilt Poker.
The Danish poker pro was a part of the wave of Scandinavian players (Scandis) who were dominating the game during the poker boom. Jepsen was one that almost seamlessly transferred his online poker skills to the live tournament tables.
Everything changed in 2014, however, when he was charged with cheating via poker software that allowed him to see other players’ computer screens. The Danish Economic Crime Department charged Jepsen and two others with the crimes.
Though it took quite a few years for the courts to work the case through the system, Jepsen was ultimately found guilty earlier this month.
Jepsen on a Poker High
Poker players emerged from around the world during the poker boom, though quite a few came from Scandinavian countries. Known for their aggressive styles and online poker prowess, they were generally feared at the tables.
Jepsen was among them. In his early 20s and an injured military veteran of the Iraq War, he was a quiet but powerful poker player.
His first big score came in late 2006 when he played the Caribbean Poker Classic on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts. He finished third in the Championship for $165,000. Several months later, Jepsen played the European Poker Tour in Warsaw, and he played the EPT Main Event, winning it for the equivalent of $415,679.
At the same time, he was making a name for himself online, playing at some of the highest stakes. That led to a sponsorship in the fall of 2007 with one of the leading sites at the time, as he became a member of Team Full Tilt.
Jepsen went on to play predominantly online poker, even playing what was, at the time, one of the biggest hands in the game’s history. He took down a pot of more than $499K from Tom Dwan.
By 2009, Jepsen had parted ways with Full Tilt and signed on to represent Ladbrokes Poker and then Betfair Poker.
Interestingly, Jepsen reported in 2008 that he was almost the victim of an online scammer. Someone posed as an employee of a poker company at the time and sent a file for Jepsen to download. That file turned out to be a trojan file, one that would have allowed the originator to view everything on Jepsen’s computer, including his hole cards while playing online poker. Jepsen played the role of the hero by speaking about the incident, how he protected his data, and how other players could be scammed.
In 2009, Jepsen made another claim that someone tried to hack into his computer again. That time he claimed that someone hacked a friend’s account and sent a link. When he clicked that link, he noticed something suspicious and eventually found out it was a trojan.
Fast Forward to 2014
As detailed in this 2014 article by PocketFives, a number of high-stakes online poker players had been accusing someone of installing trojan hacking programs onto their computers or selling cheap laptops to them with the program already installed. The software – Remote Access Trojan (RAT) – allowed the hacker to view the victims’ computers as they played online poker, hole cards and all.
Poker players tried to solve the crime and eventually began pointing fingers at Jepsen. They eventually took their suspicions to the Danish authorities, who started an investigation.
Peter Jepsen Denmark
Tanskalainen Peter Jepsen sai juuri usean vuoden vankeustuomion siitä, että oli kusettanut miljoonia dollareita asentamalla haittaohjelmia pokeriammattilaisten tietokoneille. Lyhyesti siitä, kun jouduin samanlaisen kusetuksen uhriksi Barcelonassa 2013. https://t.co/kCW6DJCT1V
— Jens Kyllönen (@RealJeans89) December 13, 2019
The Copenhagen Police worked with the Economic Crime Department to investigate Jepsen.
Long Road to Justice
The court finally put Jepsen on trial on charges of fraud, though he pleaded not guilty.
According to TV 2, a Danish news outlet, the Copenhagen City Court ruled that Jepsen did, in fact, commit fraud against other poker players by installing a spy program on their computers from 2008 to 2014. He not only used the malware to view his opponents’ hole cards when playing online poker, he also gained access to their bank accounts and stole money directly.
Jepsen was formally convicted of fraud and hacking, leading to the illegal profiting of approximately DKK 26,376,929, which is equal to more than $3.9 million.
The judge sentenced Jepsen to three years in prison, though six months were deducted from that time due to the length of time it took to hear the case.
In addition to the jail sentence, the court ordered Jepsen to repay the money to the victims of his crime. The amount to be repaid is NOK 26,000,000, which equates to just under $3 million.
Peter Jepsen's Age
Jepsen immediately appealed the decision to the Eastern Lands Court, demanding an acquittal.
Peter Jepsen Verdict a Mixed Victory for Poker Justicehttps://t.co/XMcvkLzAZZ
— Flushdraw (@FlushdrawPoker) December 9, 2019