Thank you, Karim. We are pleased with our financial results for the first quarter, driven by strength in redemptions, which indicates that our product initiatives are working, as well as the material improvement to our balance sheet. For the first quarter, we performed in line with our guidance and delivered the third consecutive quarter of positive adjusted EBITDA, and we saw meaningful acceleration in billings from Q4. Given Q1 is a seasonally weak quarter for the company, this result is a testament to the work we have done to re-engineer our cost base. Now, turning to our first quarter results, my comments will be year-over-year comparisons for the first quarter, excluding Entertainment, which we sold in December 2023, unless stated otherwise. In Q1, billings reached $105.2 million, a 12% increase. On a category basis, we continued to see strength in travel and everyday spend. The restaurant category also grew once again this quarter after rebuilding our sales team. More than half of our growth came from our top accounts spending more with us, winning back key accounts and reducing churn. Our North Star, redemptions, which drives consumer incentives on our income statement were up 20% to $37.6 million. Revenue, which is billings net of consumer incentives but before partner share, was $67.6 million, up 8%. As we continue to refine ADE, we are getting more effective at driving redemptions, and we believe redemption should be seen as a leading indicator of demand. In the short term, we may see outsized rewards as engagement accelerates beyond top line growth due to our targeting and ranking improvements. We feel good about this dynamic, especially given adjusted contribution was $37.1 million, up 27%. Margin increased from 47% to 55% as a percentage of revenue and 31% to 35% as a percentage of billings. We are keeping more of every dollar we bill even while redemptions are accelerating. About half of the operating leverage we are seeing is driven by our partner share renegotiations, which annualized in June, with the rest driven by mix shift between banks. We believe adjusted contribution is a better long-term indicator for our business rather than GAAP revenue. Turning briefly to segment results, U.S. revenue increased 6%. The U.K. continued to show very strong double-digit growth at 56%, partially due to our auto-enrollment program with Lloyds. As we mentioned, auto-enrollment means customers no longer have to opt into our offers program, which has allowed our U.K. sales team to sell and deliver larger budgets. We expect to see very strong double-digit growth in the U.K. in Q2 as a result of auto-enrollment, new leadership and our newest U.K. bank partner, Monzo, which is now live. Notably, our U.K. business is primarily on a cost per redemption pricing model, and we believe the U.S. business will begin to see the benefits of shifting to similar models, which we plan to do later this year, albeit on a larger base. Bridg revenue grew 1% due to the expansion of existing contracts and offset by the loss of a single existing customer. The redemption and partnership dynamics we've discussed do not impact Bridg. So revenue is the key metric we use to assess the performance of this business. In Q1, we invested in foundational elements, including product design, engineering architecture and go-to-market resourcing. We continue to grow the profiles in our database, and we are actively onboarding top regional grocers with a line of sight to 100 million profiles, and we believe we have the scale to be relevant to CPG customers. Adjusted EBITDA was $0.2 million. And as Karim said, the first time in the company's history for adjusted EBITDA to be positive in the first quarter. Business operating expenses came in lower than expected at $36.8 million. However, operating expenses should normalize in the mid-to-low 40s, given the investments we are making in our technology, product and sales organizations in support of key growth initiatives. Operating cash flow was negative $17.6 million. The first quarter is always seasonally low from a cash flow standpoint due to annual bonus payments, interest payments and timing of accounts receivable. Last quarter, we introduced a new metric, free cash flow. In Q1, free cash flow was negative $22.4 million. However, we expect free cash flow to be positive in the second half of 2024. On the balance sheet, we ended Q1 with $97.8 million in cash and cash equivalents, and we had $29.5 million of unused available borrowings under our line of credit. As a reminder, we paid $20 million at the end of January as part of our settlement with SRS, which was offset by cash received from the $50 million equity offering in March. We also repaid the $30 million draw on our line of credit in April. In addition, we repurchased $184 million of our outstanding 2020 convertible notes at prices below par value, partially via the issuance of $172.5 million of new convertible notes now due in 2029. Through these transactions and the repayment of the line of credit, we have reduced the amount of debt that would have been considered current as of September 2024 to $46 million from $260 million, absent other capital transactions. The convertible transaction settled on April 1 and will be reported in our Q2 financials. Lastly, MAUs were $168.5 million and ARPU was $0.40 for the first quarter, an increase of 7% and a decrease of 2%, respectively. The increase in MAUs was driven primarily by net new MAUs, and the decrease of ARPU was driven by 20% increase in redemptions. Turning to our Q2 outlook, for Q2, we expect billings between $115 million and $126 million, revenue between $73 million and $81 million, adjusted contribution between $40 million and $45 million, adjusted EBITDA between negative $3 million and positive $1 million. Our billings guidance represents 7% to 17% growth, excluding the sale of Entertainment. I'd like to provide some additional color on what we are seeing in the top line. Billings continues to be driven by success in the everyday spend and travel categories, and our larger clients are spending more with us. We are focusing on getting new brands onto the platform and winning back lapsed brands. With these brands, we are seeing pilot programs convert into larger budgets based on strong campaign performance. We are expecting another quarter of elevated redemptions as we continue to see the benefits of improved targeting and ranking. Adjusted contribution is expecting 19% growth, excluding Entertainment, at the midpoint of our guidance. As previously stated, we expect operating expenses to increase to the mid-40s, excluding stock-based compensation due to the investments we are making in our technology, product and sales teams and in support of key growth initiatives like dynamic marketplace and Bridg. We continue to expect double-digit billings growth for the full year 2024 and to be operating cash flow positive on a full year basis with both accelerating as we enter 2025. We are focused on our North Star, redemptions, and we expect to continue to drive consumer engagement, top line growth and full year positive adjusted EBITDA. Now, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions.