The Fun Side Of Business
Let’s keep it real, business life isn’t all boring meetings and stiff suits. Behind the polished pitches and fancy titles is a whole other story!
We’re talking about the real stories, the unfiltered, uncut moments you won’t find in any polished promo video.
Behind every brand is a story—unexpected, totally entertaining, and 100% human. So here’s to the real ones: the dreamers, the grinders, the risk-takers.
Business life? It’s not what you think. It’s way more fun.
The Fun Side Of Business
Name Game, Great Guest
This episode is only available to subscribers.
The Fun Side Of Business - The Extra Slice
Exclusive access to premium content!A forgotten surname sparks a confession, and that small crack opens a bigger, warmer story than a slick intro ever could. We sit down after the main show to unpack Mark’s arc—how a guy who looks like pure banter turns out to be thoughtful, grounded, and shaped by signals of class he never fully fit. The painter and decorator van at parents’ evening, the urge to smooth the edges, the jokes that soften sharp rooms—these details paint a Britain you recognise, where wit and graft carry you through doors that weren’t built for you.
From there the energy shifts into serendipity. One holiday becomes a rep job; one gig opens into the next. It’s easy to label it luck, but what stands out is Mark’s habit of stepping forward. Three cars, four scooters, late nights, and louder crowds become training for something subtler: how to read a room, make people feel seen, and keep your feet when the music gets silly. Yes, there’s a European thong contest. Yes, there’s a bar-top moment and stories you’d rather not share over breakfast. More interesting is the way he holds it all—no self-pity, no chest-beating, just a sense that life is best lived with curiosity and a steady pulse.
We also get honest about risk. Quitting a job for a love that didn’t last becomes, in Mark’s telling, a memory that still pays dividends because it kept him moving. We rate him on our holiday scale, wander into Crete, weigh nostalgia against responsibility, and land on a simple truth: some lives look accidental from the outside, but up close they’re built on thousands of small, brave choices. If you like candid stories about class, travel, work, and the messy way character shows up, this one will stick.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves a good origin story, and leave a quick review so more curious listeners can find us.
Oh, sorry, yeah, I got carried away. Anyway, welcome to the extra slice.
SPEAKER_00:Slice, slice, slice, slice.
SPEAKER_02:I don't know whether that's ever gonna get trademarked, Jim.
SPEAKER_00:By someone else.
SPEAKER_02:So, okay, so let's go into some full confessionals. I'm gonna do some full confessionals here.
SPEAKER_00:Oh then.
SPEAKER_02:Right, so I got him to introduce himself.
SPEAKER_00:Yes.
SPEAKER_02:Because I had a mind blank and couldn't remember what his surname was.
SPEAKER_00:No!
SPEAKER_02:And then the best part was is he I kept prompting him to introduce himself and he never once said his surname.
SPEAKER_00:He never said his surname.
SPEAKER_02:No, so he just known as Mark Once in a Lifetime.
SPEAKER_00:So we just had to have a.
SPEAKER_02:Even though he's definitely Mark Francis. After he did it, and then and then literally for the first five, ten minutes of the podcast, I'm like, shall I bring it up now or has it now gone too far? So I can bring it up.
SPEAKER_00:I wonder, but then you went back to him a second time. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Because I kept trying to get his name. Because I'm like, please just say your whole name. And he didn't. And then he called himself Mark Once in a Lifetime. Anyway, so yeah, there you go. There's the full confessional. So as slick and as polished as the show ever appears. Extremely professional. At least you will know it's a definite one-take wonder. Because otherwise, I mean, literally, I got to about a minute and a half and I was like, this is shit. I need to just sack this off and start again. But yeah, do you know what? Good or bad, you just run with it, right?
SPEAKER_00:I thought that this morning. I thought we didn't start off that great.
SPEAKER_02:Why is he stuttering and like not sure? Yeah, I totally forgot his name. Well, anyway, so there's there's that comparison.
SPEAKER_00:But it ended up being an incredible, incredible episode.
SPEAKER_02:Do you know what I thought was really nice? So I've always liked Mark.
SPEAKER_00:Yes.
SPEAKER_02:And I've always thought, do you know what? He's just a bit of a Jack Delad and what have you. To hear the story that he's had, and then bless it, when we switched off and he said, Oh my god, I hope I don't come across as like some like jumped-up prick or whatever. And it was like, no.
SPEAKER_00:You're the complete opposite to what anyone You're so down to earth.
SPEAKER_02:But you know, yeah, I mean, at the end of the day, I'm sure that he was he's gonna be able to look back on his life on his deathbed.
SPEAKER_00:The thing is, we can sit here and laugh and say, Do you know what?
SPEAKER_02:I I've had a really good life. Yeah and good for him.
SPEAKER_00:And we can sit and laugh and banter with him in oh you la da da da da, you've done this, you done that. But he wasn't when he went to that all-boys school.
SPEAKER_02:The one with the nips in it.
unknown:With the nips.
SPEAKER_00:If people haven't heard it, they're gonna think nipples, you do it.
SPEAKER_02:I don't know what they're gonna think, but yeah. Well, put it this way, it'll teach it'll teach them both ways. That if they're not gonna listen to the extra slice, they're never gonna know what we're talking about. But I don't know why they'd listen to this bit without listening to the main pod, main pod.
SPEAKER_00:But if they do then, because these bits are fun.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, true. Yeah, okay, fair enough. Hang on, that that just that just makes our like podcast sound really shit. Yeah, these are the fun bits, and yeah, yeah, it's not I'll just forget your name or something, and then at least it's like balances out, right?
SPEAKER_00:But uh where was I even going with that?
SPEAKER_02:I don't know. But now at least you now have your mind blank thing that you can't remember. We would we were talking about like um I think you were talking about his.
SPEAKER_00:But he doesn't come across like a preppy No, he doesn't. And that's what I love.
SPEAKER_02:And that's for him to then say, I hope I don't come No, you're nothing like And the other thing is as well, is I think that I would probably think I don't think less of him, because I think that's thing, but I think he would have had more of an entitled attitude if he would have come from the, you know, the money side of those people at that school. But obviously it's a probably quite a tough upbringing.
SPEAKER_00:He's crafted and worked.
SPEAKER_02:Mum and dad grafted.
SPEAKER_00:He didn't get anything handed to him. Do you know what the story I did really like, I know.
SPEAKER_02:But I mean his mum. I mean, let's face it, hang on, when you say he didn't get anything handed to him, I'm gonna I'm gonna challenge that one.
SPEAKER_00:So from a from a when he was young, I mean. Yeah. From a mother and dad.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, maybe from a mum and dad, yeah, that's fine. And then and then he goes on holiday and ends up as a travel breath.
SPEAKER_00:His mum pulls up in a painter and decorator van, yeah, and he tells the people at school, oh, the painter and decorator dropped me off. Yeah. Want to admit that was their own van. Or his own.
SPEAKER_02:That was his mum. Yeah. I don't know how we piled that up on parents' evening. Oh, no, no, no. The painter and decorator, yeah, got a twin sister, that's my O pair. Well, my mum and dad are they're away working, so the painter and decorator's come to my parents' evening to discuss how well I'm performing in my Latin.
SPEAKER_01:Oh, yeah. Brilliant.
SPEAKER_02:So, but I mean I th I think at the end of the day, you know, I'm sure, and and I think that's a little bit about Mark. I think Mark focuses on the positives, and I think that he takes the best out of stuff.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:So, you know, I don't think anyone can quite have a life. You know, when when you heard about, oh yeah, he came back and quit that job for this, you know, this love that then lasted four weeks.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:There was no woe is me about it. It was, oh yeah, we'll share how much.
SPEAKER_00:I'm just gonna start an adventure and crack on. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:So so I think that whilst he's probably had an awful lot of good fortune in life, you know, I go on holiday and got a job as a rep, and then I'm on his job as a rep, and someone else says, Oh, do you want to come and be this? And then I go into that, and I'm like I think what it is, he's a 90s influencer.
SPEAKER_00:He fell into a lot of stuff, hasn't he? Quite naturally. So yeah. I really enjoyed him.
SPEAKER_02:Oh yeah, I did that interview. Yeah, it's three questions. Do you like drinking girls and having fun? Yeah, great. Okay, here's a job.
SPEAKER_00:At the age of 21, yes.
SPEAKER_02:At the age of 21, and now let's give you three cars and you know, unlimited alcohol and you know, unlimited hen trips to the hen house. So yeah. I th I think you know, yeah, I think I think ultimately, you know, it's it's a nice thing to see, and it's a nice thing to, you know, follow the life thing. Because again, I think everyone has their own journey. And some people have paths that are more difficult, some people have paths that are easier, some people have paths that are sadder, and some people have paths that are happier. So I think it's just nice to have the contrast. But I definitely think that there's many people that would go, yeah, that's what my life is.
SPEAKER_01:Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, like the upbringing and what have you. And you go, Yeah, what a bunch of memories you're gonna have from that.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, which he has.
SPEAKER_02:I mean, obviously, I wouldn't. It's like, yeah, I've I studied for 20 years as an accountant, and obviously you wouldn't trade that for like Malia 1830s or anything for like cocktail barber and all that.
SPEAKER_00:But he he even said, didn't he, at the end, he said it just got him reminiscent, it got him thinking about I hadn't thought about that in ages.
SPEAKER_02:Stripping naked at Malia and swapping both of some random.
SPEAKER_00:Which is what I love about this.
SPEAKER_02:But yeah, I think what a guest. Okay, right, rate him on holiday scale.
SPEAKER_01:Oh okay.
SPEAKER_02:I know holidays you've been on, I know ones you like, and I know ones you hate.
SPEAKER_01:Oh my last my helicopter ride in Vegas. Really?
SPEAKER_02:I thought you liked him way more than I'm do you know why I'm gonna score him and I think there's only one thing I can score impossible. My trip to Crete. Oh I have to score him as my trip to Crete.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. And you did talk a lot about Crete.
SPEAKER_02:Like you were, it was very creepy, honestly. Yeah, but that's the thing. If you you know, when you look at like you, and you are far, far better travelled than I am, right? So you've been to more countries, you've been to more stuff, you've experienced more of the world than I have. It just so happened that his place he brought up was like Oh I know.
SPEAKER_00:Oh yeah, I think. What place I've not been to. I mean, I've been cr uh to Crete, but I've not been to the one you were talking about.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, well you went to Malia, which he then went, it's just like the dirt.
SPEAKER_00:But yeah, so so I did rectify it because I'm going to a different place this year. Yeah and it's nice.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, and then you pronounced it badly and then because it looked pretty.
SPEAKER_00:I just butcher every other language.
SPEAKER_02:Well, so I mean I came up with like Creek bug, so that's all right. Yeah, I go into my. And a trip to Crete.
SPEAKER_00:That's amazing.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. The other is about, you know, he was good and yeah, I liked having him on. I have to say I was a little bit reticent.
SPEAKER_00:Well, I don't think none of us really knew much about him in terms of he has presented at the breakfast.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, but again, when they're presenting at breakfast, it's always a yeah, this is what I do, this is my job.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. To talk about what they do.
SPEAKER_02:You know, how many times did he say, Oh, yeah, by the way, here's me as a twenties rep.
unknown:No.
SPEAKER_02:Fronting fronting three cars, four scooters. Yeah, I don't think we sort of, you know, the latest 27-person hen party. Dancing on the bar in a phong. We didn't get told that. The European thong contest.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah. I'm glad we didn't get told that at breakfast, actually.
SPEAKER_02:No, all the story about Jim.
SPEAKER_00:Or the story about Jim.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, you didn't want to hear it. Jim and his pants. Yeah, Jim and his pants. Do you know what now? I think just from hearing this, now if someone hasn't heard the podcast, they should listen to this and go, all right, I need to hear the story about Jim and his pants and the European thong contest.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, I think I might cut this and put it out there. Because it sounded and people, oh, we need to listen to that part, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, well, there you go. Anyway, so yeah, Mark, European Thong Contest. Awesome. Thank you, Mark. Brilliant. And champion of the hen house.
SPEAKER_00:And thank you, subscribers.
SPEAKER_02:Yes, and thank you, subscribers, for subscribing and the support. And we will speak to you when we speak to you. Yes. But I would imagine next Wednesday.
SPEAKER_00:Next Wednesday. Next Wednesday.
SPEAKER_02:Next Wednesday. Yeah. Speak to you next Wednesday.
SPEAKER_00:Have a great week. Cheers, back.