Web Stories Friday, October 10
Newsletter

Baby’s a big botty

Chloe Sutton, a married mom of a 19-month-old, is being accused of falsifying her son’s hefty, 33-pound physique with artificial intelligence for social media clout. 

“[There are] a lot of people thinking he is AI — he’s not AI,” Sutton, 25, from Australia, swore to a doubting digital audience of over 8.1 million. “This is my son. He’s just a big baby.” 

Chloe Sutton must routinely prove that her baby is a human, and not an AI-generated bot, due to his humongous build. TikTok/chloesapic

The Gen Z, standing at 5-foot-6, then hoisted up her huge tot — whose body spans more then half the length of her frame — proving that the not-so-little one’s size is, in fact, au natural. 

But, for the virtual skeptics who still weren’t convinced that the tot is a human, rather than an automation, Sutton had her 6-foot-2 husband join them in a subsequent vid. And even next to his stately father, the tyke is massive. 

He’s the king-size king of the crib — and his hulking highness is not alone. 

Breastfeeding mothers in NYC and beyond have credited the protein-rich nectar with helping their babies bulk up to impressive heights and weights. nicoletaionescu – stock.adobe.com

Maci Mugele, a 21-year-old mom of one, was recently accused of child abuse, owing to the massive weight of her son, Gunner. 

Born at around just 6 pounds, Gunner soon tipped the scales at a hefty 22.5 pounds by month four — that’s the  average weight for a baby boy at the 11-month mark, per reports. 

But by the time Upper West Side mom Alexa Priego’s son, Kason, hit 11 months old, he weighed a whopping 30 pounds. 

People regularly mistake big babies, like Sutton’s son, for toddlers or AI fabrications. be free – stock.adobe.com

“People stop me on the street to tell me how cute he is,” Priego, 31, previously told The Post, claiming strangers often mistook her newborn for a three-year-old. “Then they ask his age and their jaws just drop.”

She attributed her sizable sweetie’s “chunkiness” to breastfeeding. 

It’s the mommy-made meal plan that Sutton’s son separately enjoyed during the first few months of life. And the protein-rich nectar could be the reason that the really bulky boy is often mistaken for a robot.

“There is definitely some AI involved, with this big baby!” insisted an unbeliever online.   

“Did he give birth to you?” questioned another. 

“That’s AI, right?” a stunned spectator wondered aloud. 

“Are you feeding him,” asked a curious inquirer, “or is he feeding you?.”



Read the full article here

Share.

Leave A Reply

© 2025 Wuulu. All Rights Reserved.