
Screaming Chicken: The F-Body Brand Built On Real Fixes
If you spend any time around classic Camaros and Firebirds, chances are you have already seen parts from Screaming Chicken without realizing it. The brand does not chase hype, flashy marketing, or trend-driven product cycles. Instead, Screaming Chicken has built a reputation by solving real problems that owners of older F-bodies face every time they drive their cars at night, daily drive them, or try to blend modern convenience with factory appearance.
At the center of the company is owner David Moderow, whose path into the aftermarket came from the same place many enthusiasts started, sitting on a couch in the late 1970s, watching Smokey & the Bandit and becoming obsessed with F-bodies at a young age. That early spark never faded. It evolved into a hands-on understanding of what these cars lack as they age, and what owners actually want when they decide to upgrade them.

From Vinyl Stripes To Functional Upgrades
Before Screaming Chicken existed, Moderow launched Big Worm Graphix in 2009. The business initially focused on rally stripes for fifth-generation Camaros, but it quickly expanded into full vinyl stripe kits and LED lighting for 2010-and-newer cars. That experience laid the groundwork for what would come later, especially when lighting became the focus.

By 2015, Big Worm Graphix had begun offering LED lighting products alongside vinyl graphics. One standout product was a footwell lighting kit for Mustangs, designed to recreate a feature usually reserved for higher-optioned trims. That idea stuck. Moderow recognized that Camaro owners wanted the same functionality, especially in cars that lacked factory interior lighting altogether.

In late 2016, he developed the first LED footwell lighting kit for 2010–2015 Camaros, using his own 2015 Camaro as the test platform. That original kit remains in use today, which says a lot about the design philosophy behind it. The kits arrived ready to install, required only two wire connections, and included loomed wiring and photo-based instructions. Once installed, the lights stayed hidden under the dash until illuminated and turned on and off automatically with the dome light. Over time, that single product evolved into a complete footwell lighting lineup covering 1967–2024 Camaros and Firebirds.
Discovering A Gap In The F-Body Market
While modern Camaros had options, Moderow ran into a wall when trying to convert all exterior lighting on his 1991 Z28 to LED in 2015 and 2016. The aftermarket support simply was not there. Pre-2002 F-bodies had limited lighting options, and most solutions felt like compromises rather than upgrades.

That realization changed the direction of the business. Between 2016 and 2017, focus shifted entirely toward older F-bodies, and Screaming Chicken officially launched in 2017. The goal was straightforward but ambitious, create lighting and hardware that fit like stock, looked intentional, and delivered modern performance without creating new problems.
By 2019, Screaming Chicken had developed a full LED lighting product line for 1967–2002 Camaros and Firebirds. Many of the parts did not exist elsewhere, so Moderow began designing and producing his own solutions using local American machine shops. One of the earliest successes was a bracket system that allowed modern plug-and-play LED fog light assemblies from newer vehicles to be installed on 1998–2002 Camaros.

Rather than stuffing brighter LED bulbs into outdated housings, these kits used modern assemblies that maintained stock size and mounting points. The result was meaningful night visibility without blinding oncoming traffic. That approach expanded into additional fog light applications for 1985–1992 Camaros and 1993–2002 Trans Ams, eventually leading to a full catalog of interior and exterior lighting solutions.
Growth Through Problem Solving, Not Trends
When the pandemic disrupted supply chains, many aftermarket brands stalled. Screaming Chicken responded by producing more in-house parts as availability shifted. The website grew steadily as new products were added, driven by necessity rather than trend chasing.
After selling Big Worm Graphix in 2022, Moderow shifted his full attention to Screaming Chicken. That focus accelerated development beyond lighting. The catalog expanded to include suspension components, motor mounts, pedal covers, GPS tracking systems for theft prevention, emblems, and keyless entry systems. Coverage now spans multiple F-body generations, including 1967–1969, 1970–1981, 1982–1992, and 1993–2002 Camaros and Firebirds.
Each addition followed the same rule: solve a real problem without creating new ones. Products are designed to fit correctly, install cleanly, and work reliably over time.
Bridging Classic Interiors With Modern Tech
Around 2022, Screaming Chicken addressed another long-standing frustration for third-generation F-body owners. Installing modern double-DIN radios in 1982–1992 Camaros had always been awkward, requiring questionable trimming or poor-fitting brackets. Moderow designed an aluminum bracket that allowed newer radios to install cleanly.

To make the solution complete, the company sourced matching bezels and built full installation packages. That decision opened the door to a much larger audio lineup. Today, Screaming Chicken offers radios, reverse cameras, speakers, and full audio solutions for 1967–2015 Camaros and Firebirds.
In 2023, that momentum continued with the introduction of aluminum dash speaker brackets for 1967–1969 and 1970–1981 models. Designed to mount a pair of 4-inch speakers in the stock dash location, the brackets avoid the warping and degradation associated with plastic alternatives. They have since become one of the company’s most popular products.

Later that year, Screaming Chicken tackled rearview mirrors with integrated front and rear cameras. While many similar products exist, none use an original 1967–1969 style mirror mount. A small adapter solved that issue, allowing modern camera functionality without disrupting factory appearance.
Commitment To American Manufacturing
One of the defining traits of Screaming Chicken is its emphasis on American-made production. Proprietary parts are manufactured using local machine shops and domestic suppliers to maintain consistency and quality. Even when reselling products, the company prioritizes U.S.-based brands whenever possible.
The lineup includes respected names such as Dapper Lighting, Dakota Digital, LG Billet, Detroit Speed, Digi-Tails, and Finish Line Factory. That approach reflects a long-term mindset rather than a race to the lowest price.
Why Screaming Chicken Matters

Screaming Chicken does not exist to chase trends or flood the market with generic parts. The brand fills gaps that other manufacturers overlook, especially for enthusiasts who drive and depend on their classic F-bodies. Each product is shaped by firsthand experience, tested in real cars, and refined until it works as intended.
For owners who want better lighting, safer visibility, cleaner audio installs, and modern convenience without sacrificing factory character, Screaming Chicken represents a rare balance. It respects the history of the platform while acknowledging how these cars are actually used today.
That balance is why the name continues to show up in garages, forums, and build lists across the Camaro and Firebird community, especially as 1980s through early-2000s performance platforms continue to resurface among enthusiasts who want cars they can actually drive and work on.






