Local broadcast artifact from the peak Bob Stoops era: KJ103’s T.J. & Tooker Tunesters ‘Who Let the Sooners Out?’ promo CD single, cut in 2000 at Oklahoma City’s hit factory just as OU football was detonating back into the national signal. This is the radio‑station issue disc, not a commercial retail release, and it carries hand‑signed marker scrawls from the on‑air crew across the face, turning a goofy game‑day parody into a small piece of OKC morning‑drive folklore.
Disc is in used but presentable condition with surface wear from actual play; jewel case shows scuffs and shelf marks from two decades of tailgates, glove boxes, and dorm stereos. Insert art is minimal station branding in Sooners crimson, a time capsule from when local DJs could still cut football anthems in‑house and have them ripple through Norman overnight. No tracklist printed beyond the main cut, as expected for a station promo, but this is the same version traded on early Napster and fan sites under the TJ & Tooker Tunesters name.
For Oklahoma heads, this sits right at the intersection of college football lore, regional radio history, and turn‑of‑the‑millennium CD culture—an artifact from when Red River weekend meant burning custom discs and blasting them down I‑35. Perfect for Sooners collectors, ex‑KJ103 listeners, and anyone building a shelf of Oklahoma‑centric sound ephemera alongside Toby Keith, local sports broadcasts, and home‑dubbed game tapes.
Rescued from the analog void by Deep Fork Cyber, just up the road from Norman in Oklahoma. Ships carefully from Oklahoma with archival‑level packing, like we just fished it out of a forgotten radio vault.