Variety: While network and studio execs bristle at the thought of a strike, a work stoppage would only fuel the rapid rise of online media, according to former Fox Interactive Media President Ross Levinsohn.

Slate: Web video isn't an oligarchy, it's a dictatorship, writes Nick Douglas. You're either on YouTube or nobody's watching. This dominance has a downside: The popular misapprehension that YouTube and Web video are synonymous has limited our sense of what online video can be.

MSNBC: So far more than 1,300 video questions for the Democratic candidates have been uploaded onto YouTube. CNN will sort through the submissions to select the two dozen or so that Democrats in Charleston will answer after watching them on a 25-by-18-foot screen.

MediaPost: Revver has announced a plan to begin offering "impression-based advertising products" to advertisers and agencies. The new CPM-based ad deals will include both pre-roll and post-roll ads, which have become the online video industry's equivalent of TV's 30-second spots.

Digital Spy: Lycos has launched a new online video service called JubiiTV.

Gizmodo: Is YouTube going widescreen?

TMZ: While Martha Stewart certainly has her fair share of haters, one of her bitter neighbors has taken it to a new level -- with a song on YouTube!