Jim Gaffigan Compares Being a Dad to Being an NFL 'Backup Quarterback': 'On the Team but You're Not the Star'

Gaffigan is dad to five kids whom he shares with wife Jeannie

Jim Gaffigan (L) and actor Jeannie Gaffigan attend the 60th Annual GRAMMY Awards
Jim Gaffigan and wife Jeannie. Photo: Mike Coppola/FilmMagic

Jim Gaffigan is getting real about his role as a father.

The comedian, 57, appeared on The Kelly Clarkson Show on Wednesday, May 1, and spoke with Kelly Clarkson, 42, about his family of seven. Gaffigan, who shares his five kids Marre, 19, Jack, 18, Katie, 14, Michael 12, and Patrick, 11, with wife Jeannie, chatted with Clarkson about his upcoming Mother's Day plans.

"For some reason, Mother's Day is held as this like hero moment," Clarkson says.

"Yeah, I mean the mother is the hero," Gaffigan says, as Clarkson quips, "Good answer."

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"Well, some of it is, you know, I have this joke where I say being a dad is like being a backup quarterback in the NFL. You're on the team but you're not the star," Gaffigan jokes. "And on those rare occasions that you're brought into the game, people are nervous, you know?"

"But maybe you're Purdy and you're just sitting there waiting, and then it's like a star moment," Clarkson adds, referring to NFL quarterback Brock Purdy. "I think you're the Purdy of fathers."

"Oh well, I do feel like it's the most important thing I will fail at, you know what I mean?" Gaffigan teases.

Jim Gaffigan at the Garden of Laughs Comedy Benefit held at The Theater at Madison Square Garden on March 27, 2024
Jim Gaffigan.

John Nacion/Variety via Getty

In March, Gaffigan spoke with PEOPLE about how he's raising his five kids in New York City. "It was a huge mistake," Gaffigan joked.

But the proud dad said that he thinks his kids enjoyed growing up in a big city while adding that a lot has changed. "I mean, also, it's different, right? Because now there's — I'd love to walk a block in New York City and not smell weed. You know what I mean?" Gaffigan said.

"When you're in your twenties, you're like, 'Yeah, there should be no rules.' And then when you're a parent, you're like, 'Hey, maybe not every block.' And of course, I live in the East Village, so I'm kind of asking for it," he continued.

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