"Go out to the fanciest club you can find, one with a long line out front, and… ." Aziz Ansari had to stop his routine mid-sentence on Saturday night and throw in a funny aside, when he seemed to suddenly remember where he was. "And, well, you might have to drive for a bit."

Unless you count the so-called Parlay Lounge inside Treasure Island Casino, there were no nearby clubs for a swank, Tom Haverford-style after-party following Ansari's latest roll through Minnesota. The "Parks and Recreation" star – one of the hippest standup comics in the biz -- seemed like an odd booking for the rural casino (near Red Wing), but he packed the showroom there and didn't lose any of his smart, smarmy urban flavor.

One of the best montages in his nearly 90-minute set centered on online dating, which he's all for. He hilariously compared the commitment-based eHarmony ("You have to fill out all these forms") to the more freewheeling Cupid.com (which he said means, "I want to [make love] to someone tonight!"). Come to find out, a couple in the crowd was on a Cupid.com-generated date. He also poked fun at his friends who are starting to have kids, which he's not all for. At least not in the case of his Caucasian friends. "White babies are so gross," he said. "They're like brown babies that aren't ripe yet."

Other bits included a story about eavesdropping on rapper 50 Cent in a restaurant (where he complained about a grapefruit soda not being purple) and an update on his chubby cousin Harris, a favorite from past comedy tours/specials. Ansari was reminded of his surroundings at least one other time in the show, when he inquired how some newlyweds in the crowd agreed to commit. The dude proposed on a fishing boat, where his wife pulled the ring out of the tackle box. Jackpot for Aziz!

Opening comedian Joe Mande easily localized his act, too: Turns out, the New York-based rising star went to high school at St. Paul Central, which he said was "a lot like 'Dangerous Minds,' but with a really good honors system." He went into detail about a mean Spanish teacher there who looked like "Seinfeld's" Newman (it was a woman), and he went on to describe the diverse school as "very tidy… and by that, I mean apartheid-y."