Gordon had been interested in claims of the paranormal since the late 1940s and read every book he could find on ghosts, ESP, UFO's and astrology. Gordon wasn't so sure about UFO's and thought maybe there was some possibility they existed, but then in 1952 he read
Martin Gardner's book
In the Name of Science later to be published as
Fads and Fallacies. The next influential book sealed Gordon's fate as a skeptic was D.H. Rawcliffe's
The Psychology of the Occult. His first experience speaking as a
debunker on mainstream media was an interview on the evening news for the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) on November 1, 1960. He was interviewed by a young
Peter Jennings. Gordon explains that he was given this opportunity because he had done a thirteen-week series on magic for the CBC and had all the necessary paperwork in order. In 1966 he was interviewed by the CBC show
Seven on Six and given seven minutes. Finally in 1969, the media was beginning to become very interested in the paranormal which meant Gordon was receiving more appearances, he was interviewed on the CBC show
The Occult and in 1975, on the CTV network for
Canada AM. In 1977 he was given a thirteen-week program on the CBC called
Morningside. Gordon says that up until 1978 he felt like the lone skeptic, he was unaware of other like-minded people who shared his passion for debunking the paranormal. In 1978 he was asked to be a speaker at a symposium at
Concordia University where he met fellow speakers
Paul Kurtz and
Ray Hyman. Gordon says that
CSICOP "opened new worlds for me". He was first appointed a Scientific and Technical Consultant and they set up CSICOP Canada. The group existed for two years before smaller skeptical groups started springing up around the world. Gordon became the founder and first chair of the Ontario Skeptics, a precursor to Skeptics Canada. He was also a fellow of the
Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), and was well known for his debunking of the claims of self-proclaimed psychics such as
Peter Hurkos Gordon also participated as a debunker on numerous radio and television shows in both Canada and the United States, including
The Great Debate,
People Are Talking,
Larry King Live and
The Oprah Winfrey Show, and taught a course called "An Objective Inquiry into Psychic Phenomena" at
McGill University from 1979 to 1981. Paranormal propondent
Allen Spraggett offered Gordon $100 on CBC's
Morningside if he could do a trick that he (Spraggett) could not explain. Gordon pulled out three small sponge balls from his pocket and turned them into 16 balls. Spraggett could not figure out the trick, and Gordon replied that he invents his own tricks, and that "Just because something can't be explained doesn't mean there's some psychic gobbledygook at work". Gordon's first debunking column appeared in the weekly Montreal newspaper
The Suburban (the first such column of its kind in North America), and then, after moving to Toronto, Gordon wrote the debunking column "Extrasensory Deception" for two years for the
Toronto Sun, and wrote the regular column "Debunking" for the ''
Toronto Star's
Sunday paper for more than twenty years. According to the Toronto Star'' editor, Gerry Hall, "Henry turned his critical eye to everything from UFO sightings to psychic detectives and chiropractors". Many of Gordon's columns were published in his book
Extrasensory Deception: ESP, Psychics, Shirley MacLaine, Ghosts, UFOs (Macmillan of Canada, 1988). In 1992 the
Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSICOP) presented Gordon with the
Responsibility in Journalism Award. The challenge of teaching the public to think critically was a subject Gordon talked about often. In a 1990 article for
The Journal Times he told the interviewer that it felt like it was a losing battle at times, '"We're trying to combat the wave of irrationalism that is actually sweeping the continent and the world"'. He understood the need to want to believe in the paranormal, felt that people had a strong desire to want to think that there is something after death. He had investigated ghosts, psychics and other paranormal claims and always found a natural explanation. "... as long as there is doubt, people will believe the books, call the 900 numbers and watch the television specials". ==Uri Geller==