Dow Jones: NBC Universal and Fox appeared set this spring to shake up Internet video with the announcement of a joint venture expected to challenge YouTube. Six months later, that business -- now dubbed Hulu -- has lost cachet and may become irrelevant even before its delayed start.

New York Times: New Ahmadinejad video gives SNL another hit on the Web.

Financial Times: Google "could do a better job" at preventing illegally copied video from appearing on YouTube, Peter Chernin, president and chief operating officer of News Corp. said.

New York Times: Former Seventeen editor Atoosa Rubenstein is posting a series of YouTube videos inspired by the book The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B and Back Again). The videos -- two episodes a week for a month -- are aimed at women 15 to 35 and star Ms. Rubenstein as an animated Warhol portrait.

NewTeeVee: The real world (complications) of life-casting.

Forbes: After being caught off-guard by YouTube and the dawn of the Internet video age, the major TV broadcast networks are embracing online video like never before. But it's a confusing time for everyone involved. As the networks struggle to figure out the best way of attracting viewers online, we spoke with top executives at NBC Universal, CBS, ABC and Fox to get their perspectives.