"It's definitely not a G-rated show," Handler said this week while driving on a Los Angeles freeway. "People definitely shouldn't bring their kids. Or their parents. Unless their dads are single. And cute."

Handler, author of "My Horizontal Life: A Collection Of One-Night Stands" and the star of "The Chelsea Handler Show" on the E! network, brings her raunchy perspective on sex, intercourse, coitus, copulation, fornication and just plain doin' it to Comedy Works tonight and Saturday.

"It's not too hard to describe," Handler said of her act. "It's about dating. And how annoying people are when they get married and how married people are such losers.

But Handler's blond looks and brash hyperlibido - and the gaggle of slack-jawed straight men drooling over an attractive woman so open about sex - seem to put her closer to Jenny McCarthy than Kim Cattrall's Samantha Jones on the zeitgeist scale.

Handler, who says she still hits the live stage about three times a month, long lived the life of a traveling comedian. Eventually, she played the Montreal International Comedy Festival and had bit stints on "Spy TV," "The Practice" and "My Wife and Kids."

Considering Handler's penchant for jokes about drinking, memory loss and casually slipping to Vicodin addiction, she tempers her time in Aspen: "I barely remember that entire week. I blame the altitude."

"So many single women can relate," she said. "There's a big female audience now, probably more than men. In the past few years, there's a big difference.

"And now there are a lot of gay men and lesbians coming out. A lot of lesbians think I'm gay. It would be a lot easier if I were. But I can't get behind the cowboy boots and the pickup truck. Or that haircut."

Filming the first season of "The Chelsea Handler Show" wrapped last month after the network, pleased with the first eight episodes, asked for four more.

Handler has in the works a half-hour special on Comedy Central and a part in a National Lampoon movie called "Cattle Call" that should arrive around the new year. And she has recently appeared on "Scarborough Country" on MSNBC.

"You can't write two books about one-night stands," she said. "Otherwise you can't expect anybody to ever marry you. Especially if you want to marry twice."

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