Agreed with those that think it was cool to hear our crowd cheer so loudly in unison for anything. And I also agree that it is a shame that it wasn't cheering something for which we own the copyright.
At 90 years old, Vern Alden wrote a letter to The Athens News asking why people don't seem to feel compelled to use the name that we own: OHIO. The guy was only the President of the Harvard Business School before he was President of OHIO and understands the importance of branding, and also understands that if you do not use a brand, you then lose the right to own it. And this led to tOSU challenging our copyright. If Vern thinks it's important, then it is important. He's just not some crazy coot nattering around in an assisted living facility in Massachusetts.
So sure, it doesn't hurt if "OU-Oh Yeah" sticks, but like it or not we are going into a strech where our last four games will be on national broadcast television, and most of the eyeballs and ears turning in are of people who believe OU is Oklahoma. They don't care if you believe we are OU, because we aren't. Oklahoma owns the trademark for the interlocking OU that we seem insistent to continue to use on t-shirts in our bookstores, and if they ever feel as though we are a threat to their trademark, they will enforce their copyright, and a court will shut down that usage in short order.
So my two cents is to come up with a second cheer that utilizes "OHIO" in it somewhere, because our institution owns that. I am personally fond of "WE"-"are"-"OHIO", emphasis on the "WE", because it sticks it in the face of Brady Choke AND tOSU fans.
Brady thinks it insults tOSU by calling them "OHIO", and tOSU fans seem to buy that it is an insult, even though their fans spell O-H-I-O in cheers, with their bodies, and do the inane "OH"-"IO" as if it is their birthright.
In particular, I like this because it was the chant in the crowd after we had Michigan closed out in Nashville. It then became a t-shirt, and I am fond of it because I was the one that started the chant in Nashville. And it is different from Marshall/Penn State and many others that use the common variation because the emphasis is on "WE" then a soft "are", then institution name, not "WE ARE", which makes for a cadence differentiation from the common cheer.
But as I find most of those living in Ohio, folks are just lazy. So I don't anticipate there is any passion for actually creating anything incoportating OHIO. Get off my lawn.
Thaaaaaank you DA. Someone who finally understands branding. Fail to use OHIO on this miracle of exposure, we are permanently handing it to OSU. "WE are OHIO" is desperately needed.