Scott was test-driving a customer's car around Tucson, when he saw' an unconscious woman behind her wheel(方向盘)with the emergency flasher on.
The 21-year-old man immediately stopped and jumped into1. The woman's car was still2gently. Scott stopped the front wheel of her car with a big rock and went to the window. The woman was3and her lips had turned blue. Scott started hitting her window hard, shouting but she didn't4. Scott didn't have his phone; He5takes it with him when he's out test-driving cars, because he doesn't want any distraction while6on the road.
Fortunately, two passers-by stopped and were able to call 911 but help was still minutes away. So Scott broke a back7and opened her car. He8her pulse(脉搏)and couldn't feel one.
Scott knew he needed to give the woman CPR(心脏复苏术), but he'd neve9for it. And then it10to him that in a film a man performed CPR to a model to the rhythm of Bee Gees "staying alive". He started giving her CPR11saying "staying alive" loud. A minute later the woman came around.
If Scott hadn't given her CPR, the results would have been very different. Scott's12drew national media attention and many interview requests. But Scott turned them all13except his friends' and strangers' congratulations on his14. He said that he just did what anyone else in his15would have done.