In the summer of 1967, a quiet street in Jacksonville, Florida, became the stage for one of the most unforgettable moments in photojournalism. What started as an ordinary workday turned into a life-or-death scene captured forever in a single frame. That photo, later named “The Kiss of Life,” would become an iconic symbol of courage, instinct, and the power of split-second action.
The scene was intense: an unconscious electrical worker, J.D. Champion, dangled high above the street, held only by his safety harness. The air crackled with thousands of volts of electricity. His coworker, Randall Thompson, climbed the pole and performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, balancing on the narrow structure while danger loomed all around. Every second counted.
Rocco Morabito, a photographer for the Jacksonville Journal, wasn’t looking for history that day. He was on a routine assignment, bored, driving the familiar streets. Then he noticed the commotion near a utility pole—workers shouting, pedestrians frozen. Something was wrong. Very wrong.
Champion had accidentally touched a high-voltage line carrying over 4,000 volts. Instant unconsciousness. No pulse. No breathing. If not for the harness, he would have fallen immediately. Thompson reacted instinctively, climbing up and giving CPR in midair—an act of calm, precise heroism under unimaginable pressure.
Morabito captured it all. He framed the shot, clicked at the perfect moment, and documented Thompson’s life-saving act: lips to lips, bodies straining, the city street far below. The photograph told a story words alone could never match: danger, courage, humanity.
Emergency crews arrived minutes later. Champion regained a pulse. He survived. Thompson, humble as ever, insisted he just did what anyone would. But the world saw it differently. The image was published, quickly spreading across the U.S. and then internationally. Its power was undeniable.
In 1968, Morabito won the Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography. “The Kiss of Life” became a teaching moment in journalism schools, emergency response programs, and workplace safety courses. It wasn’t just a photo—it was a reminder that courage, quick thinking, and human connection can save lives in an instant.
Fifty years later, the photo still resonates. No edits, no staging—just a real moment where someone stepped forward when it mattered most. Champion survived, Thompson continued his career quietly, and Morabito captured a moment that would define visual storytelling forever.
At its heart, “The Kiss of Life” is about ordinary people facing extraordinary circumstances. It’s about heroism, training meeting instinct, and the split-second decisions that can change everything.
Have you ever witnessed someone act heroically in a critical moment? Share your story below and celebrate the everyday heroes around us!
