Among the people interviewed by Gordon was three-term Michigan Governor
George W. Romney, whom he interviewed on August 31, 1967.
Boston Globe reporter Neil Swidey said that "for more than a year, Romney had been talked about as the Republicans' best chance for winning the White House in 1968. So, during that August interview, when [Romney] was asked by Lou to explain his inconsistent position on the [Vietnam] war, Romney replied, 'Well you know Lou, when I came back from Vietnam, I had just had the greatest brainwashing that anybody can get.' One word,
brainwashing, [emphasis added] and his presidential campaign would never recover. Worse, that single, politically-charged word became not just the shorthand for his aborted White House run, but also the bumper sticker for his entire life's work." The controversial interview with Romney landed Gordon and his
Lou Gordon Program on the front page of newspapers across the country, as well as
Time magazine. In an ironic footnote to all the publicity and political fallout surrounding the Romney interview, the staff at WKBD did not initially realize the scoop they had on their hands. The station was still in its infancy (first air date only two and a half years earlier in January 1965) and was always looking for cost efficiencies. One of those cost-cutting directives was to routinely
wipe and re-use videotape. With no hint of the firestorm that was about to come, the Gordon show reel was simply put on the shelf of available videotape and quickly re-recorded with another local show. In the days that followed the national attention from the Romney interview, the station officials mounted an all-hands search for the segment, but it remained missing until it surfaced in recent years and is now available for educational and personal use. Many guests got so frustrated with Gordon's hard-hitting style that they simply walked off the show in the middle of the interview. In one controversial episode, which originated from
WKBS-TV in
Philadelphia, mayor
Frank Rizzo walked out of an interview with Lou because Rizzo thought the questions were unfair. Gordon was one of the first journalists to come out publicly against the
Vietnam War (in 1964, prior to the 1965 Marines invasion) and was also one of the first commentators to publicly accuse President
Richard Nixon of wrongdoing in the
Watergate scandal. Gordon considered being on
Nixon's Enemies List as a "Badge of Honor". In early 1977, shortly before his death, Gordon interviewed
Chuck Colson, who was on tour in support of his new book,
Born Again. As suggested by the title of his book, Colson was "
born again" as a recently converted
Christian. During the interview, Gordon asked Colson, "Do you suppose, Mr. Colson, that God caused your father to die while you were in prison as a punishment for your lifetime of sins?" Colson wrote later that as the two stared at each other, "absolute contempt passed between us," but Colson answered, "I don't believe that about my dad, Lou. Ours is a loving God." ==Gordon's mission==