Thank you, Marcela. We delivered first quarter results in line with our guidance range for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. On a year-over-year basis, overall revenues for Q1 2023 declined 27% to $67.2 million, as expected, driven by the ongoing shift towards short-form creator-led content, continued softness in the broader digital advertising market and the sales execution challenges Marcela referenced earlier. Performance by revenue line is as follows: advertising revenues declined 30% year-over-year to $34.2 million, in line with fourth quarter trends as expected, primarily driven by both pricing and demand pressures on our owned and operated properties. Content revenues declined 33% year-over-year to $21.6 million with branded content performance decelerating versus the fourth quarter as expected. As a complement to our content revenues, we are introducing a KPI to represent net branded content advertiser revenue retention, which is a function of both the number of clients we serve and the spend per retained clients. This metric reflects current period trailing 12-month branded content revenue as a percentage of prior period trailing 12-month revenues for branded content customers that spent a minimum of $250,000 in the prior period. As we outlined last quarter, the steps we took to combine the BuzzFeed and Complex sales teams created operational challenges that negatively impacted our revenue performance in Q1. These impacts materialized in the form of lower revenue retention versus the prior year. However, average spend per advertiser remained relatively consistent year-over-year. Commerce and other revenues grew 6% to $11.3 million, driven by easing comps in our organic affiliate business. This revenue performance resulted in Q1 adjusted EBITDA loss of $20.2 million in the quarter, $3.5 million lower year-over-year, with the majority of the lower revenue year-on-year mitigated by the cost actions taken throughout 2022. We also incurred charges that did not impact adjusted EBITDA. A full reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP measures can be found in today's press release available on our Investor Relations website. We ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of approximately $50 million. Turning to audience engagement and Time Spent. In terms of audience Time Spent, we continue to report U.S. Time Spent across our owned and operated properties and third-party platforms according to Comscore. This metric is intended to be viewed in conjunction with our advertising revenue performance. As we have discussed in previous quarters, audience Time Spent with our content on Facebook has continued to decline driven by increased competition from newer creator-driven vertical video platforms for which Time Spent is not currently captured by Comscore. As a result of these declines, the advertising revenues we generate from Facebook are no longer material to our overall advertising revenues. As of January 1, 2023, we have removed Facebook from our reported measure of Time Spent. We will continue to report U.S. Time Spent according to Comscore, which reflects our owned and operated properties, YouTube and Apple News. As Jonah discussed earlier, the broader strategic reprioritization across the company has enabled us to align resources to the platforms and formats that represent the biggest opportunities for future growth. And we believe this change in reporting methodology now aligns with our go-forward monetization strategy, namely to increase focus on our owned and operated properties. In Q1, U.S. Time Spent as reported by Comscore declined 3% year-over-year to 109 million hours. In terms of creator-led vertical video, ahead of scale monetization, we are continuing to build audience momentum around newer platforms and formats, including YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels and TikTok. In the first quarter, we continued to grow viewership of our short-form creator-led content, generating billions of views across platforms in Q1. This gives us further confidence that we are driving the right strategic focus to position the business for long-term growth and monetization. Before I share our financial outlook for the second quarter, let me first provide some context. Starting with revenues. In the year ago quarter, BuzzFeed Studios delivered two feature films, which contributed to Q2 2022 content revenue. For Q2 2023, no film projects are scheduled for delivery in the quarter. Also in the year ago quarter, Complex hosted a metaverse experiential event known as ComplexLand. This event will not repeat in Q2 2023. Excluding these year ago revenues, we expect Q2 year-over-year trends to improve modestly as compared to Q1. In terms of adjusted EBITDA, as Jonah and Marcela discussed, in April, we took further steps to reduce our fixed cost structure and align resources to the formats and platforms that will propel our future growth. These steps, together with our previously executed cost savings have positioned us to mitigate the majority of the bottom line impact from lower revenues and achieve breakeven adjusted EBITDA in Q2. With that, I will turn to our financial outlook. For Q2 2023, we expect overall revenues in the range of $76 million to $81 million or 24% to 29% lower than the year ago quarter. We expect this revenue decline in conjunction with the fully executed cost savings announced in mid-April to result in adjusted EBITDA in the range of $0 million to $4 million, and we expect to deliver full year 2023 adjusted EBITDA in the high teens million. As we lean further into creators and AI, we see the opportunity to drive significant operating leverage and adjusted EBITDA margin improvement over time. We look forward to sharing much more about our long-term plans with you at Virtual Investor Day. Thank you, and we look forward to taking your questions at our Investor Day this Thursday.