We confess that we're actually quite enjoying save-the-world week here at Gawker, in which the combined effect of all the advertising on the site is to approach the tone of the Mary Schmich/"Kurt Vonnegut" alleged commencement address. (Don't start wildfires! Master the Internet! Wear sunscreen!)

What we've been trying to figure out, though, is which of these PSAs is our favorite. We were initially drawn to the "Only you can prevent wildfires" ad, both because of its ridiculousness — of all the horrible things we might do, starting a wildfire is among the least likely — and because of its Proustian echo of our youth, when those ads ran on TV during cartoons and the dread conflagrations were still referred to as the apparently un-P.C. "forest fires."

But then we started looking further, and we realized they're all pretty fab. We dig the retro cool of the tsunami-relief ad. (That happened, what, a year ago? Can't they find a more au courant disaster to relieve?) We admire the very micro nature of the ad opposing skin cancer. (Next in that series: Catching cold is terrible! Wear a coat!) And we're tickled by the ad promoting a glossary of IM-speak, so parents can know what their kids are saying online and whether they're chatting with a sexual predator. (We assumed our reader were far more likely to be said predators than to be parents.)

Finally, though, we found our favorite:

This image was lost some time after publication.

"See the world through math and science," it says, pushing the website girlsgotech.com. (Seeing the world through articulate English is apparently less important.) Having little idea what the hell this meant, we clicked through. Here's what we learned at girlsgotech.com

No matter where you live or what language you speak, math, science and technology play an important part in your everyday life. Take a look around, and you'll start to notice that math, science and technology are everywhere!

Technology is everywhere? We had no idea. Thank you, Ad Council!

While we're on self-esteem-boosting, we really hope some ads for "Free to Be You and Me" will show up later today. Because we could use a reminder that it's all right to cry — especially when paying advertisers seem to have disappeared.

Girls Go Tech [Official site]
Earlier: Wildfires Apparently Controlled From Cubicle in Midtown