Student Broadcasters. Professional Vision.
Trojan TV is Jenks High School's student-run broadcast program — the official streaming home for Jenks Athletics and Jenks Public Schools. Under the direction of Mason Prince, Jenks High School students in five dedicated broadcasting classes learn the full craft of audio-visual production: camera operation, graphics, play-by-play, color commentary, directing, and live switching.
The program already streams every home Jenks football and basketball game live on YouTube, reaching Trojan fans, alumni, military families, and grandparents anywhere in the world who can't be in the stands. The production quality is genuinely impressive — this is not a student hobby project. It is a professional-caliber broadcast operation run by high school students who are building real careers in media.
There is one thing the program cannot yet do: travel.
The Problem — and the Solution
When the Jenks Trojans play away from home — at Union, at Broken Arrow, at Bixby, at any of the stadiums across the state where Jenks competes — Trojan TV goes dark. The students, the equipment, and the production capability stay in Jenks. Away games are unreachable.
Mason Prince's solution is a 20-foot mobile production trailer — a fully equipped broadcast hub on wheels, with eight AV workstations, that Trojan TV can tow to any stadium in Oklahoma, hook up, and be on-air within minutes. The trailer would transform Trojan TV from a home-game operation into a full-season, every-game broadcast team.
The cost: $15,000.
Where JenksFM Comes In
Trojan TV produces video. JenksFM 90.1 broadcasts audio. They are natural partners — and the mobile trailer is the piece that makes the partnership complete.
When the Trojan TV trailer arrives at an away stadium and goes live, JenksFM 90.1 FM carries the audio feed in real time. Every Trojan fan in the car, at home, at work, or streaming from across the country hears the game live — on the radio, the way Friday nights were always meant to sound. The students get broadcast experience that extends their résumé. Jenks, America gets every game, every week, home and away.
"Once the FM station is added, Jenks High School will be the only high school in Oklahoma with an FM radio station." — JenksFM Executive Summary
The Trojan TV trailer makes JenksFM the only FM station in Oklahoma broadcasting live away-game coverage of a high school team — from anywhere in the state. That is a genuine first.