Thank you, Bob, and good afternoon. Our Q1 2025 consolidated revenue was up 1% year-over-year, above the guidance we provided of down low single digits due to March coming in slightly better than we were expecting in both our Multiplatform and Digital segments. Let me provide you with some additional granularity on our advertising revenue performance this quarter. As a reminder, we have no advertising category greater than about 5% of our total advertising revenue and no individual advertiser that is more than 2% of our total advertising revenue. In the first quarter, our top five largest advertising categories in terms of total revenue were health care, financial services, homebuilding and improvement, entertainment and auto. In terms of gains and declines in absolute dollars, as you can see on Slide 9, the four largest gains in the first quarter were professional services, tech and telco, beauty and fitness and education. And the four categories that declined the most were restaurants, auto, gambling and political. Our consolidated direct operating expenses increased 4.4% for the quarter. This increase was primarily driven by higher variable content costs associated with the growth in our digital business, including higher podcast profit sharing expenses and third-party digital costs, partially offset by a decrease in employee compensation costs in connection with our modernization initiatives taken in 2024. Our consolidated SG&A expenses decreased 1.1% for the quarter, driven primarily by our modernization initiatives, including decreased employee compensation costs, partially offset by an increase in employee health and benefit expenses, including the reestablishment of the 401-K matching program during the first quarter of 2025 and additional bad debt expense. We generated first quarter GAAP operating loss of $25.4 million compared to an operating loss of $34.7 million in the prior year quarter. We generated first quarter adjusted EBITDA of $105 million flat to prior year and at the midpoint of our previously provided guidance range. Before I turn to our segment performances, I wanted to spend a moment on the modernization initiative we announced on last quarter's call. As a reminder, these actions will generate net savings of $150 million in 2025 when compared to 2024, and our Q1 results included the benefit of $27 million of net savings. This quarter, we have included a slide in our investor presentation, Slide 5, that provides a few different ways of identifying the cost savings, including by segment, function and type. Hopefully, this level of granularity is helpful as you update your models. Turning now to the performance of our operating segments. And as a reminder, there are slides in the earnings presentation on our segment performances. In the first quarter, the Digital Audio Group's revenue was $277 million, up 16% year-over-year and above our guidance of up low double digits. The Digital Audio Group's adjusted EBITDA was $87 million, up 27.8% year-over-year and our Q1 margins were 31.4%, up from 28.5% in the prior year. Within the Digital Audio Group, our podcasting revenues were $116 million, which grew 28% year-over-year and well above the guidance we provided of up high teens. Podcasting's strong Q1 performance with its high EBITDA flow through help expand the segment's Q1 adjusted EBITDA margin by nearly 300 basis points compared to prior year. Our first quarter non podcasting digital revenue grew 8.7% year-over-year to $161 million. The Multiplatform Group revenue was $473 million, down 4.2% compared to the prior year and in line with our guidance of down mid single digits. Excluding the impact of political revenue, our Multiplatform Group revenue was down 3.4%, adjusted EBITDA was $70 million, down 9.3% from $77 million in the prior year quarter. Multiplatform Group's adjusted EBITDA margins were 14.8% compared to 15.6% in the prior year quarter. Turning to the Audio & Media Services Group, revenue was $59 million, down 14.2% year-over-year and adjusted EBITDA was $16 million, down 33.3% from $24 million in the prior year and most of that decline was driven by Katz Television. Excluding the impact of political, the Audio & Media Services Group revenue was down 11.8%. At quarter end, our net debt was approximately $4.6 billion, our total liquidity was $569 million and our cash balance was $168 million. Our quarter ending net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 6.5x. In the first quarter, our free cash flow was a negative $80.7 million essentially flat to the negative $80.9 million in the prior year quarter. As a reminder, Q1 is our seasonal low point for free cash flow in the year and we expect to generate positive free cash flow in each of the remaining quarters in 2025. With Bob's comments on the advertising marketplace as a backdrop, let me now turn to our second quarter guidance. We expect to generate second quarter adjusted EBITDA in the range of 140 million to $160 million compared to $150 million in the prior year. We expect our consolidated Q2 2025 revenue to be down low single digits compared to prior year. Our April pacing was down 2% compared to prior year and down 1.4% excluding the impact of political. Turning to the individual segments for Q2, we expect the Digital Audio Group's revenue to be up low double digits with Podcasting revenue expected to grow in the low 20s. We expect the Multiplatform Group's revenue to be down mid to high-single digits. And we expect the Audio & Media Services Group revenue to be down approximately 5% due primarily to the impact of political advertising. The full year guidance we issued last quarter did not contemplate the current macro volatility we are all seeing. Therefore, for us to date our full year guidance, we will need some positive movement in the macro and improvement to the uncertainty in the back half of the year to avoid the possible negative impact on the advertising marketplace for audio. Now we will turn it over to the operator to take your questions. Thank you.