Actually, it looks like this:

... when you plot it on a log-log graph, according to this SEDE query. The logarithms are base-10, so the 2.0 on the x-axis corresponds to 102 = 100 reputation and there are about 104 = 10,000 users with this much reputation.
Some noteworthy details:
- The first point is slightly skewed because of the many no-activity users with 1 reputation.
- The sawtooth until x = 2 (±100 reputation) looks strange, but makes sense once you realize how hard it is to get a total reputation of 2 (1 question upvote followed by 2 downvotes).
- There's a small peak around x = 2, corresponding to 101 reputation; these are mainly users from other Stack Exchange sites who only have the association bonus on Stack Overflow.
- The dip indicated by the freehand arrow, from 200 to 300 reputation, is also caused by the association bonus. Users in this range either don't have other accounts on the network, or have another site where they have more reputation.
- The rightmost data point looks like an outlier, but it's Jon Skeet, so in fact the rest of points in the graph are the outliers.
Also, required reading for those of you who believe have been taught everything can be modeled with Bell curves: The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. This is a striking example of something that's not limited by (bio)physics (like body length and life expectancy), and (like wealth in the real world) best described by a power-law distribution. Alternatively, read this Forbes article mentioned by @CodyGray in the comments.
It should look something like this:
Why should it look like that?