Here's the indictment: Terry Semel allowed Yahoo to lose its lead, in internet media, to Google; the Yahoo boss brought in his Hollywood buddies to lead an expensive, and misconceived, foray into original programming; he's missed acquisition opportunities such as Myspace, Facebook and Youtube (thought we might forgive him the last); he's been unable to fill the most crucial open position, to land an exec to drive audience growth; until Yahoo's CEO succession is resolved, it will be difficult for the company to attract senior management; and, for the first time, the 64-year-old Hollywood veteran looks, with his premature exuberance over Yahoo's revamped text ad system, like he's in too much of a hurry. In Semel's defense, the simple observation: Google's momentum makes all its competitors look bad. Voting after the jump. You decide.