Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We have a lot to cover today. I would like to recap what has been a very productive first year in our transformation and the excitement building inside Bumble Inc. as we work toward our platform and app relaunch in just a few months. I do not want to sugarcoat the challenging process that we are working through, but I am proud of our team, their pace of execution, and early accomplishments. Starting with performance, we closed out 2025 with fourth quarter revenue and EBITDA at the high end of our guidance ranges as we continue to emphasize financial discipline, balancing investment and sustainable long-term growth with healthy margins and cash generation. Kevin will provide perspective around the financial strides that we have made in just a moment. Turning to our transformation, the headline today is that we believe the heavy lift of our quality reset is behind us, and we are full steam ahead on product innovation. Before getting into the details, I want to set context. When I returned as CEO about a year ago, I came back with a clear focus: to rebuild this company from the inside out and return to what originally made Bumble Inc. so successful. What people come to Bumble Inc. for is to find love and make in-person connections, and they favor us for a simple but powerful reason: we build trust with women. We believe that when women feel safe, confident, and intentional about who they meet, the entire ecosystem works better. You get healthier interactions, a more balanced member base, and better outcomes for everyone. Our goal is to continue to lead in this area and to build the most woman-centric dating product in the market across features, design, and outcomes—one that solves real pain points women face in dating today. In 2025, we accomplished our most important goal: putting trust, authenticity, and member outcomes first. We also are running the company with sharper discipline so we can invest where it matters most and execute faster. We knew that doing this the right way would create near-term pressure, and it did. The choices we made were intentional. We began by raising standards across the platform and fundamentally changing how we approach acquisition. Performance marketing was reduced by well over 80% year over year. That was a deliberate shift away from volume-based acquisition and towards higher-intent, organically driven growth as we return to our roots of brand organic marketing. Despite raising the bar on new members and dramatically limiting marketing, Bumble app registrations and active users have stabilized. We proved two things through this exercise. First, demand for what we offer—the promise of human connection, relationships, and potentially love—is strong and enduring. Second, we believe the Bumble Inc. brand has tremendous affinity with our target audience. As we tighten trust and authenticity standards, user metrics behaved as expected. Although trust and safety is a competitive advantage and the work never ceases, we believe Q4 marks the completion of our quality reset. As we move into early 2026, trends suggest the rate of sequential member base decline is slowing, consistent with the expectation we shared with you on our last call, and the quality reset is working as designed. We have talked on previous calls about our internal framework improving the mix of our member base by emphasizing approved members, and removing accounts that were not here for the right reasons. Members who are truly here to find love and connection will be more engaged, and that is what we are in fact seeing as our mix improves. Engagement quality is improving significantly, with Bumble app week one in the U.S. up materially and monthly retention trending higher as well. These progress points demonstrate that the member experience is getting better due to the nature of the quality reset, even before we innovate the product. At the same time, we have improved the quality of our monetization base. Payer penetration for Bumble subscribers has increased, and the portion of payers choosing subscriptions has risen from 80% to 89% as we reduced certain promotional activities related to consumables. We anticipate that this shift reflects stronger intent and a greater alignment between value delivered and value paid for. Taken together, these improvements likely signal that we are building a healthier funnel from registration to engage to monetization. The data shows that our foundation is now stronger, with a higher-quality, higher-intent member base and a more sustainable payer mix. But this essential foundational work can only take us so far. To fully recover and return to growth, we must focus on product and technology innovation, which is where our efforts are now. Since the beginning of the year, I have personally spent 90% of my days with our tech and product teams reimagining what finding love looks like in the era of AI. We are rearchitecting the entire Bumble experience from start to finish, and I am taking a very hands-on role in shaping the core user experience across onboarding, profiles, and matching. As we rebuild the experience, one thing is clear: we cannot deliver the innovations we are creating on our legacy tech stack. That is why we are building the new Bumble experience on our cloud-native technology stack built with AI productivity at its core. The launch is targeted for Q2 this year. What we are calling tech stack 2.0 is not just a back-end upgrade. It is a fully new platform that will transform how we build and ship product. We expect it to allow us to deliver member experience improvements more quickly and intelligently, deepen personalization, support how our monetization model evolves over time, and serve as the foundation for more potential product launches in the future. These are all things that we have been unable to execute effectively on with the current tech stack, a fact that has limited our ability to deliver the innovations that our members should expect from us and compete better with other offerings in the category. Given the significant tech debt, the fact that we have been able to execute a major member base reset without being able to deliver the innovation that we need is a testament to the enduring strength of our core product and our brand. This makes me excited to show what we can do once our new platform is live. The platform development is currently being executed by our newly consolidated product and technology organization, led by our Chief Product and Technology Officer, Vivek Sagi, and supported by the engineering-led innovation hub that we built in Austin over the last six to nine months. The buzz in the building is strong, and our renewed energy is already accelerating our pace. We are working more tightly across teams, putting member satisfaction and product at the center of our daily work, and building with clearer accountability and execution. Our new tech stack will enable us to deliver an experience built around people, not just profile. Across the industry, members are dissatisfied with being reduced to images and potentially dismissed with a swipe. Bumble 2.0 introduces a chapter-based structure designed to help members tell their stories more authentically and understand one another more deeply. This will enable them to see matches with stronger compatibility signals, build confidence in the experience, and get to meaningful in-real-life dates more quickly. Before the rollout of the new Bumble Date, we are continuing to deliver updates on our legacy 1.0 tech stack that improve outcomes and address the most consistent pain points that we hear from members. We are addressing global member feedback, particularly women's feedback. One example is a new “Really Into You” tab, which we began testing last month. While results are early, they have been positive, showcasing the importance of strong signals of intent. We also rolled out tests of Profile Guidance and Suggested Date. Profile Guidance delivers personalized, actionable feedback on bios and prompts, guiding members step by step to help truly reflect who they are. Suggested Date is a new feature designed to make expressing date intent effortless, and to get people offline as quickly and confidently as possible. Beyond the major updates that we are making to Bumble Date in the near term, we are also actively infusing AI into the core Bumble experience and recommendations algorithm. Our objective is not simply to layer AI features onto the product, but to build the underlying system that reflects how people actually meet, connect, and form relationships so AI can operate within that structure. Done right, AI helps the network function better by prioritizing fewer, more relevant matches over volume, combating swipe fatigue, and moving members more efficiently towards real-world connection. What differentiates our approach is not just the AI technology, but the depth of the proprietary data that we have built over more than a decade. AI on its own is neither a moat nor disruptor to online dating. Its effectiveness depends on high-quality, scaled interaction data, and the hardest part of building a successful dating platform is earning trust and building that member base at scale. We believe that we have one of the largest and most nuanced datasets of real human connection in the world, leaving us uniquely positioned to use AI in ways that are more personalized and effective than any potential new entrant. To that point, we have talked in the past about building a standalone AI experience. What we learned in the development process is that the best way to launch a standalone product is to start with enabling it on preexisting datasets. We formed a team to focus on a standalone product feature. We call it “b,” that is integrated in the core member base to accelerate development and iteration. “b” is designed to become a personal dating assistant and matchmaker, learning members' values, relationship goals, communication style, lifestyle, and dating intentions through private conversations, then using those insights to identify mutual compatibility to find better dates with a higher degree of confidence and relevance. Importantly, this work is grounded in our longstanding commitment to privacy and trust, ensuring members remain in control of their data. A pilot of these core functionalities is testing internally and will be launched in beta soon. In addition to reimagining the dating experience, we continue to expand how people connect through Bumble BFF. We recently launched an important update that makes groups discoverable, allowing members to find and join communities based on shared interests. Early response has been encouraging, with a 17% increase in the number of active groups in just two weeks since launch. Looking ahead, we have a series of product updates planned as fast follows, including the introduction of functionality designed to bring members together in curated, real-world settings. And these are not just BFF initiatives. Ultimately, they extend into dating. We see an exciting opportunity around group dating as we reimagine the Bumble experience. While the millennial dating experience was more one-to-one, Gen