Thanks, Ben. The second quarter revenue grew 31% over the prior year quarter to $65.4 million. Our growth was driven entirely by our direct-to-consumer segment which was a 59% year-over-year to $44.6 million. As Ben alluded within direct-to-consumer we have seen a real bifurcation of performance with Honey Birdette and Playboy achieving continued growth while Yandy and Lovers have experienced worsening trends as the year has progressed. Honey Birdette revenue was up 32% year-over-year to $22.4 million in the second quarter, and up 37% on a constant currency basis. Growth in HV was driven by a 15% increase in brick and mortar revenue and a 49% increase in e-commerce. Solid growth on both fronts despite Australia being more heavily impacted by the current macro economic situation and relatively low brand awareness for Honey Birdette in the U.S. Playboy e-com revenue in the second quarter grew 90% year-over-year and revenue in the month of July eclipse the Yandy for the first time ever. While the Playboy brand continues to grow, our supply chain was hit especially hard in our licensed inventory where we are heavily reliant on our partners around the world. We have made strides to increase our owned and operated portfolio. This includes bringing design and marketing in house and hiring key people in these two areas from Victoria’s Secret Abercrombie, American Eagle, Calvin Klein and GapBody. The buying behavior of customers that Yandy and Lovers has been severely impacted by inflation leading to a year-over-year decline in revenue of $8 million in the second quarter the bulk of which was driven by Yandy. Yandy is also part of an unsustainable marketplace wholesale model with low margins and a highly saturated competitive set, which creates higher risk and exposure to supply chain challenges due to our supplier impacts. For example, Yandy was running a 50% out of stock rate during the first part of the second quarter, to mitigate this in the short-term, we have made an effort to secure safety stocks are our top 20 selling items as well as our Halloween merchandise. Similar to what we are trying to do at Playboy, our long-term focus at the Yandy is to grow our owned and operated business which should ultimately yield higher margins more control and enable a shift to profitable growth with less than paid media. Lovers saw significant raw material cost increases impacting product margins, and when combined with high fixed costs due to our store footprint, there is less flexibility for us to address the revenue shortfalls we have experienced due to declines in store traffic. Similar to what we experienced in Playboy and Yandy, we are highly dependent on a vendor model and their supply, which resulted in supply chain disruptions and out of stock items. That said we have integrated our Lovers and Yandy buying games driving efficiencies and enabling us to reduce headcount. In our licensing segment, Q2 revenue was flat year-over-year to $15.9 million. Given the macro climate, some of our apparel and gaming partners have experienced weaker trends as the year has progressed, resulting in a reduction of reported revenue on our end. We believe these are more category wide headwinds and not specific to our brands as other partners have produced better than expected results, which helps to offset the declines. Reported revenue from our partners in China was stable. However, the severity of COVID lockdowns in the country resulted in cash payments coming in after the quarter ended. We have signed amendments with our major partner that put them on payment plans to help them during this time. Instead of being paid by our partners semi annually, we are shifting to more frequent payment plans for the next several quarters that will result in the majority of the expected cash payments arriving this year with some amounts deferred to future periods. There is no revenue impact related to the new payment terms as the overall contractual values remain intact. All partners have made their first payment, we have already received nearly half of the amount that were passed due and we will continue to monitor the situation closely. In light of all of the macro challenges that have impacted our business and the uncertainty that lies ahead, we are withdrawing our prior financial outlook and suspending guidance for the remainder of this year. It is clear that our rate of revenue growth has not materialized as previously expected and we must adapt our investment strategy accordingly. As Ben mentioned we are currently undergoing a strategic review so that we can position the company to be cash flow breakeven by the end of this year. While we remain focused on sustaining investments that we believe are most critical to executing on our long-term strategy of growing our direct-to-consumer and digital businesses, we are also focused on rationalizing our business to improve operating efficiency. We may incur transition costs that impact our financial results this year as we implement these changes. But we believe the work that we are doing now will allow us to enter 2023 as a more streamlined and efficient company well positioned to capture the global demand we continue to see for the Playboy and Honey Birdette brands. Although revenue is difficult for us to forecast in the current environment, we are very focused on cost levers that we can control. Embedded in our prior fiscal year 2022 adjusted EBITDA outlook with an expectation that on a pro-forma basis, non-product costs would increase by a little more than $30 million this year, an increase of roughly 17% year-over-year to over $210 million annually. Over half of that expected cost increase for this year, or more than $17 million was expected to be driven by our investments in building out both our direct-to-consumer business and CENTERFOLD around seven million of the expected cost increase due to technology and infrastructure costs. As we work to consolidate operations, build a unified back end across all of our direct-to-consumer businesses, and remedy our IP controls. The remaining six million or so is largely driven by corporate and public company costs, such as higher insurance and audit fees, along with additional resources in areas that the company has historically under invested in, such as finance, accounting, tax and compliance. Based on the cost reductions that we started making to the business last quarter, when we took out approximately $5 million of annualized overhead. Our current run rate on non product costs is just under $200 million annually. As part of our ongoing strategic review, we are closely scrutinizing our investment plans for the remainder of the year, determining potential tradeoffs and reducing costs where we can such as eliminating plan hiring, reducing marketing spend, delaying plan, product or store launches, and reducing headcount. We intend to be responsive to what we are seeing in the marketplace and to control our costs tightly so that we can manage our liquidity and balance sheets accordingly. One example of this is our near-term store expansion plans for Honey Birdette. Although the business continues to grow nicely, we are taking a more disciplined and cautious approach to store openings this year. We have already opened stores in Miami and Stratford, UK and had signed leases for Short Hills, New Jersey and international Plaza in Tampa. But we have decisions to make on the remaining store openings that were planned for this year, Our existing U.S. stores that perform quite well averaging a million dollars of annualized revenue per store was 30% for a while EBITDA margins, which makes for a compelling argument to push forward with our previously communicated plans. However, we want to be mindful about taking on fixed long-term liabilities in the current environment and so we better understand how the how long these conditions may persist, and any potential impact on the Honey Birdette consumer. We also must consider the near term cash impact as each new store costs around $700,000 to build out. So we will have a roughly two year payback period on any initial cash outlay. While we believe, we have ample liquidity to open more Honey Birdette stores this year, we want to ensure we have enough cushion to withstand any potential disruptions to our expected cash receipt. Although the business has been presented with many obstacles this year, Ben, Ashley, myself and the rest of the management team firmly believe in the long-term potential for value creation that exists. We will make near-term cost adjustments that are needed to be responsive to what we are seeing on the revenue side. But we plan to stay the course and invest prudently in executing on our strategy. With that, I would like to ask the operator to please open the line for questions.