Francis was born in
Cairo, Egypt, in 1939. In the early 1960s Francis was employed by radio
5AD as a
disk jockey and on weekends as MC at several rock 'n' roll dance venues. In early 1964, when "
Beatlemania" had swept much of the world, the promoters Aztec Services found themselves unexpectedly with a "hot property" on their hands, having long before booked "
The Beatles" in a package with several other up-and-coming English bands. Determined to make the most from their windfall, their itinerary was restricted to the East Coast. Francis responded to the demands of Adelaide teenagers and, together with Jim Slade of
5DN and Warwick Prime and Roger Dowsett of
5KA, began campaigning for an Adelaide concert. As a result of their efforts, a petition with 80,000 signatures was presented to the promoter, Ken Brodziak, who organised a two-day stopover in Adelaide for the band, with added concerts arranged for the Centennial Hall,
Wayville showgrounds. Francis flew to Sydney on 11 June 1964 and flew back to Adelaide with The Beatles the following day. The
Bay Road was crowded with onlookers as the cavalcade passed, and masses of fans were congregated on
King William Street when Francis and the "Fab Four" appeared on the balcony of the
Adelaide Town Hall. Francis became one of the first
talkback radio hosts in Adelaide; Older listeners remember his long-standing on-air partnership with
Andy Thorpe in the late sixties to mid-seventies on radio
5AD. Francis hosted his own radio show on
5AA from 1985 to 2013 and was the station's longest serving employee. He completed 50 years in radio. Until August 2013, Francis hosted his radio program from 8 pm to midnight every weekday, commanding between 24 and 28 per cent of the evening radio audience. In July 2013, it was announced that Francis was to retire at the end of that year. The following month he announced that he would retire from broadcasting on 8 August 2013 after 57 years. A variety of radio, television, media, and music celebrities expressed their appreciation towards his career through taped segments being aired during his last week of broadcast. Francis was made famous to the rest of Australia through the
ABC TV show ''
The Chaser's War on Everything'' when one member of the Chaser team rang him to question 5AA reporters as they were not at the "Subway Fresh Bread" press conference which was actually just a commercial. Because of his temper, he was a constant target for prank calls, such as one featuring on
John Safran's show. These clips have appeared on the video sharing site
YouTube. In 2005, Francis was inducted into the Australian Radio Hall of fame at the
Australian Commercial Radio Awards held at the
Sydney Convention Centre. The award recognises outstanding lifetime achievement and contribution to the radio broadcasting industry. After receiving the award, he said: "This is one of the greatest honours I can imagine, to me like winning an
Academy Award." Francis regularly expressed his extreme dislike for the tax payer funded
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). In the final two ratings periods of 2012 Francis was beaten by
ABC radio's
Peter Goers. In July 2013, Francis announced that he would be retiring from radio at the end of the year after talks with 5AA management. He told the
Sunday Mail, "I just decided I wasn't really enjoying coming into work each day anymore." ==Recognition==