A giant, 16-pound baby made headlines when he was born in 1983. Now, as a 35-year-old man, he’s still big.
Clark told the New York Post last month that he is now 6 feet, 9 inches tall and weighs about 300 pounds.
“There isn’t a day that goes by when someone doesn’t ask me how tall I am. I like to joke that I’m 5-foot-21. When people ask if I play basketball, I ask them if they play miniature golf,” he told the Post.
When he was in school, Clark said he didn’t play sports despite pressure from coaches. Later, he joined the U.S. Air Force and became a military police officer in Texas.
“There’s a natural tendency for people to think that because you’re tall, you’re in charge. I always say, ‘Everyone looks up to me,’” he joked.
“I was a police officer for a while and everyone instantly would ask me questions, like I was in charge. I’d be in the same uniform as them, sometimes with less stripes,” Clark added. “Conversely, though, I was never able to hide in a crowd.”
The Post noted that when Clark was born, “Saturday Night Live” poked fun of his size during its long-running “Weekend Update” segment. “Their headline was, ‘We found where Jimmy Hoffa has been hiding!’ They were saying it was me — and I’d been hiding inside my mom,” he explained.
15-Pound NY Baby Born
Recently, a 15-pound baby was born in Elmira, New York, and Clark has some advice for the child.“Be prepared because at social gatherings, and at almost every family reunion, people are going to want to talk about it,” said Clark. “Nobody is going to believe that it’s true— that your mom could [survive] that,” he added.
Clark said that if the New York baby girl, named Harper, grows to be tall, it won’t always be easy.
“She’s probably going to be embarrassed at some point. It’s part of the territory,” he told the newspaper. “I’d tell her: Just be yourself and have a sense of humor.”
Harper’s mother, Joy Buckley, said she didn’t expect it.
Harper’s weight is that of an average 5-month-old baby.
After the birth, the child was placed in the neonatal intensive care unit at the hospital.