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TL;DR
Most people typing "skool loose screw" are searching for the track "Loose Screws" by Skool Boyz, a group whose stylized name uses "Skool" the same way "old skool" does — as a casual, vintage spelling of school. The song is available on the major streaming services. "Loose screw" itself is an English idiom meaning someone is mildly unhinged or eccentric — "a few screws loose." That's the lyrical hook. Separately, skool.com is a course + community SaaS founded by Sam Ovens, completely unrelated to the song. The brand confusion is just a coincidence of stylized spellings. If you wanted the song, head to Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube. If you wanted the SaaS, skool.com is the right URL. Tools4skool is a Chrome extension for skool.com community owners — also unrelated to either the song or the idiom.

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About "Loose Screws" by Skool Boyz
Skool Boyz is the group behind the track. The song lives on the major streaming platforms — search the title plus the group name on Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube Music to find the official release. Dates, length, and album context vary depending on which version of the song surfaces; if you want the most current authoritative info, the artist's verified profile on Spotify or Apple Music is the source of truth.
Lyrically the song plays with the "few screws loose" idiom — being slightly off, being unhinged in a fun way, leaning into eccentricity. That kind of self-aware unhinged-energy is a recurring theme in the genre the song sits in.
If the search led you here looking for lyrics or a lyric video, Genius and AZLyrics typically index the track with timestamps. YouTube has lyric-on-screen versions for popular tracks.
What "loose screw" means as an idiom
"To have a loose screw" or "to have a few screws loose" is English slang for being slightly crazy, eccentric, or mentally off. It's old — the phrase shows up in writing back to the 1800s. The metaphor: a piece of machinery with a loose screw doesn't work right, and neither does a person whose brain has "come loose."
It's almost always used affectionately or self-deprecatingly. Calling someone "a few screws loose" usually means "weird in a fun way," not "clinically unwell." The reverse — "all your screws are tight" — isn't a real idiom; the phrase only goes in one direction.
Music and pop culture lean on the idiom heavily. It signals being unfiltered, unhinged-but-charming, willing to go further than expected. A track titled "Loose Screws" is signaling that energy from the title alone.
Skool.com — the SaaS that has nothing to do with this
Skool.com is a community + courses platform founded by Sam Ovens. Online creators run paid groups on it: gym coaches, marketers, course sellers, productivity gurus. The platform has a community feed, classroom (course builder), calendar, leaderboard, and DMs. Members pay a monthly subscription for access.
The brand uses "skool" as a stylized spelling of school. Same casual feel as "Skool Boyz." That's the only connection — both pick the same vintage misspelling for stylistic reasons. There's no business or ownership link.
If you arrived here searching for the song and ended up on a SaaS page by accident, that's why. Search engines occasionally collapse the "skool" spelling into one cluster of results.
Tools that run on skool.com (still not related to the song)
If you ended up here because you actually run a paid community on skool.com, the relevant tool is tools4skool. It's a Chrome extension that adds the things skool.com doesn't ship natively: Auto DM Sequences with multi-condition triggers, image DMs, a 60-second Churn Saver that DMs anyone who cancels, Comment Miner for pulling hot leads out of the feed, Member Export CSV, Keyword Monitor, scheduled posts with a Post-Now button, and a CRM Pipeline Kanban for tracking warm members.
It uses your existing skool.com session — no password is stored. Free plan covers 1 sequence and 20 DMs/day. Paid tiers: $29, $59, $149/mo. The early-access form is at https://forms.gle/AtyW7Nq7Qtjk8JTo6.
None of this has anything to do with Skool Boyz or the song. Just covering the bases for searchers who arrived here from either direction.
Stop leaving DMs, churn, and revenue on the table.
tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.
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