Thank you, Amit. This quarter was more challenging than expected. Although we continue to execute on our Northstar redemptions, our overall business experienced headwinds. While our top line grew more slowly than expected, we continue to be focused on tightly managing expenses and maintaining a strong balance sheet. Now, turning to our specific second quarter results. My comments will be year-over-year comparisons to the second quarter of 2023, excluding entertainment, our former subsidiary that we sold in December 2023, unless stated otherwise. In Q2, billings reached $110.4 million, a 2% increase. The majority of the weakness was a result of our ongoing changes to our platform and technology, which led to unpredictable delivery rather than pipeline weakness. While some level of underdelivery and overdelivery is inherent in any ad network, we are taking decisive action to address our operational challenges around forecasting and delivery. We experienced growth in our travel and entertainment and everyday sign verticals with standout growth from key airlines and hotels, but partially offset by downward movement in DTC and retail. In parallel to scaling new logos, our churn rate, which is based on the number of advertisers that leave our channel, is at its lowest since before the pandemic. Consumer incentives, which we refer to as rewards, increased by 25% to $40.8 million due to enhancements in ADE and more performance ad serving. Revenue, which is billings net of consumer incentives, but before partner share, was $69.6 million, a decrease of 7%. Revenue decreased due to a combination of lower-than-anticipated billings, largely due to underdelivery of budgets we have secured and higher-than-expected consumer incentive payments. We are getting more efficient at servicing the right rewards to the right user. In the short term, we will continue to see outsized rewards as engagement accelerates beyond top line growth due to these targeting and ranking improvements, but we expect this to normalize as we further refine our technology and pricing to better align rewards with returns. While in the near term, this is pressuring results in the long run, we expect the benefits to come given the flywheel effect to our business. Rewards delayed cardholders driving loyalty and brands and with cardholders banks, new banks strengthen our network and advertisers benefit from consumer insights and measurable outcomes that drive growth. We continue to be focused on adjusted contribution, which we believe is a better indicator for our business than GAAP revenue. Adjusted contribution was $36.4 million, up 1%. As a percentage of revenue, adjusted contribution margin was 52%, up 4% year-over-year, primarily due to bank mix and partially offset by higher consumer rewards. Turning briefly to segment results. US billings were flat due to the previously discussed challenges with delivery. The UK continued to show very strong double-digit billings growth at 33%, partially due to our auto enrollment program with Lloyd's and the launch of our newest banking partner, Monzo, as well as budget expansion. We also signed a large grocer, so we now have 4 of the 5 biggest grocers in the UK on the channel, which will continue to drive engagement. Bridge billings were up 5% over Q1 but down 6% compared to last year due to the loss of a single existing customer. The redemption and partnership dynamics we've discussed do not intact bridge, so revenue is the key metric we use to assess the performance of this business. MAUs were $165.5 million for the second quarter, an increase of 3%, driven primarily by organic growth in the US in auto enrollment and a new bank in the UK. ARPU was $0.42, down 13% as a result of the 25% increase in consumer incentives as we continue to deliver more rewards to cardholders. Adjusted EBITDA improved year-over-year from negative $3.8 million to negative $2.3 million this quarter. The U.K. delivered positive adjusted EBITDA for the third consecutive quarter. Total operating expenses, excluding stock-based compensation, came in at $38.7 million. While we continue to believe in the changes we are making to our technology product and sales organizations to support growth over the long term, we are mindful of managing our expense base given our results. We expect operating expenses to remain below $40 million per quarter for the remainder of the year. In Q2, operating cash flow was positive $4.4 million, and free cash flow was negative $0.4 million. On the balance sheet, we ended Q2 with $71.2 million in cash and cash equivalents, and we had $60 million of unused available borrowings under our line of credit. As a reminder, we repaid the $30 million draw on our line of credit in April. I am also pleased to announce that we've extended our $60 million line of credit with the Bank of California through July of 2026 with a lower interest rate. Now, turning to our Q3 outlook. For Q3, we expect billings between $100 million and $106 million, revenue between $56 million and $63 million, adjusted contribution between $32 million and $35 million, adjusted EBITDA between negative $6 million and negative $3.5 million. Our billings guidance represents negative 7% to negative 13% growth, excluding our former subsidiary Entertainment. I'd like to provide some additional color on what we are seeing in the top line. Our Q3 guidance does not reflect our ambition. We expect there to be continued disruption in Q3 as a result of the changes we are making to our ad platform, but we believe that driving consumer engagement and modernizing our technology are necessary to support our long-term goals. We are not assuming any material improvement to our delivery for purposes of guidance despite several initiatives underway. From a pipeline standpoint, we are seeing continued strength in travel and everyday spend. And after rebuilding our restaurant team at the end of last year, we expect to see growth in Q3. Headwinds in retail performance will continue with budgets from top accounts flat year-over-year in that category. The UK is expected to contribute double-digit billings growth in the quarter as we continue to capitalize on the incremental MAUs that unlock larger advertiser budgets. Bridge is expected to contribute positive growth as we continue to build out Ripple and establish relationships with our new CPG advertiser base. We are expecting another quarter of elevated redemptions as our targeting continues to service the right rewards to the right users. We expect adjusted contribution to be lower due to the expected decline in billings and revenue with margins similar to previous quarters. Adjusted EBITDA reflects the impact of our billings guidance while continuing to make strategic hiring decisions where we believe the return will be realized. We no longer expect double-digit billings growth for the full year 2024 or to be operating cash flow positive on a full year basis. We remain focused on our North Star redemptions, and we expect to continue to drive consumer engagement. For 2025, we believe performance will accelerate as our operational execution improves and as we scale a major new FI partner, see continued strength in the UK and start to more fully realize contributions from Ripple. We believe all of these factors can support double digit billings and positive free cash flow in 2025. We are confident that our improved balance sheet and cash flow can enable us to continue to invest in the business and repay the remainder of the 2020 convertible notes in September 2025. Now, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions.