Thank you, Karen and Chris. I'd like to take a few minutes to discuss our newly announced restructuring plan and then spend some time talking through our Q3 results and finally discuss our current outlook for the remainder of fiscal year 2024. Today we are announcing a new restructuring program to reduce annual expenses by more than $200 million. The objective of the cost reduction is to reshape Peloton to align our cost structure with the current size of our business and position Peloton to generate sustained and meaningful positive free cash flow, which is a top priority for us. We expect to achieve the $200 million run rate savings by the end of fiscal 2025, with a significant share of the cost reductions taking place immediately. When fully implemented, we expect to reduce our team size by approximately 15% or roughly 400 global team members. Operationally, we will continue to reduce our retail showroom footprint. We are also reimagining our go-to-market approach for our international markets to be more targeted and efficient. While we have no plans to exit any of our existing international markets, we will leverage global strategies and capabilities where we can, allowing us to optimize and consolidate resources with localized execution. We made some very tough decisions, and while we firmly believe these actions are the right thing to do for the business. Cuts like these are painful, both because we’re disrupting people's lives and because we're saying goodbye to genuinely good and talented people. We wish our outgoing colleagues the best. And while these decisions are always difficult, they have been made carefully to ensure we can continue to provide the best fitness experience for our members, maintain positive free cash flow over the long term, and continue to invest in core areas of our business that will drive subscriber growth. We will continue to invest in innovation across our software, hardware, and content portfolio and in improvements to our member support experience to meet the needs of current and future members. We'll also transform our marketing efforts to increase engagement with new targeted audiences and drive more efficient growth at scale. Now, let me touch briefly on our balance sheet. We are mindful of the timing of our debt maturities, which consist of convertible notes and a term loan, and we know this is also on the minds of our shareholders. We believe that achieving positive free cash flow makes Peloton a more attractive investment for debt holders. Overall, our refinancing goals are to de-leverage and extend maturities at a reasonable blended cost of capital. We want you to know that we've been working closely with our lead banks, J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs, and our financial advisor, BDT and MSD partners on our refinancing strategy. We are encouraged by the support and inbound interest from our existing lenders and investors, And we look forward to sharing more about this topic. Now let's spend a few minutes on our Q3 results. We ended Q3 with 3.06 million paid Connected Fitness subscriptions, reflecting a net increase of 52,000 in the quarter. Average net monthly paid connected fitness subscription churn was 1.2%, which outperformed internal expectations. Bike rental continued to outperform our internal expectations in Q3, with new rentals up 10% year-over-year. Our rental buyouts also exceeded expectations. While the churn rate for rental remains higher than that of outright purchase, churn from rental subscribers improved 60 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Peloton certified refurbished and third-party retail sales had strong growth year-over-year and outperformed our expectations. We also continue to see strong growth in subscriber additions who purchased their Peloton equipment in the secondary market. We ended the quarter with 674,000 paid app subscriptions, reflecting a net reduction of 44,000 in the quarter. Paid app subscriptions were lower than our forecast due to a couple of factors. First, additions were lower than expected. We saw underperformance in the Peloton for Business Channel and softer trial demand. Second, we saw higher than expected average monthly paid app subscription churn of 9.2%, primarily driven by subscription cohorts whose legacy pricing for App+ expired. Given the current growth headwinds we're seeing for apps, we decided to hold back media investment as we evaluate the tiered pricing strategy and subscriber acquisition funnel. We are continuing to invest in the product experience and in improving product market fit. It's worth noting that while paid app subscription declined quarter-over-quarter, app subscription revenue increased 2.4%, driven by continued growth in our premium App+ subscription. Q3 total revenue was $718 million, which was within our guidance range of $700 million to $725 million. Our revenue consisted of $438 million of subscription segment revenue, which represents 61% of total revenue, and $280 million of Connected Fitness segment revenue. Total Q3 gross profit was $310 million, resulting in a gross margin of 43.1%, roughly 60 basis points ahead of our 42.5% guidance. Our Connected Fitness Segment gross margin was 4.2% in-line with internal expectations. Excluding the impact of a one-time write-down of $9 million for Guide product inventory, our Adjusted Connected Fitness Segment gross margin was 7.4% in Q3. Subscription segment gross margin of 68.1% was in-line with our expectations and up 80 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was $6 million in Q3, exceeding the high-end of our Q3 guidance range by roughly $26 million due to lower operating expenses across multiple areas. Within sales and marketing, we've scaled back media spend that we determined to be less efficient than our investment threshold. We also benefited from cost reductions Lauren made during the quarter to improve the efficiency of our brand and creative investments, including reductions to spend with outside agencies. G&A expense was lower-than-expected due to lower legal, IT, and software expenses. R&D expense also came in favorable due to efficiencies in software development and contractor spend. We generated $9 million in free cash flow in Q3, the first quarter of positive free cash flow in 13 quarters. Free cash flow exceeded our expectations. While the majority of our app performance is permanent savings, we did incur an amount of timing savings that we expect to shift into Q4. We ended the quarter with $795 million in unrestricted cash and cash equivalents. And we also have access to a $400 million revolving credit facility, which remains undrawn to-date. Overall, our Q3 performance reflects our continued leadership in the Connected Fitness category and the strength of our subscription business, as well as the tremendous progress we have made in re-architecting our cost structure as evidenced by our achievement of positive free cash flow for the first time in over three years. I'd also like to highlight a few key areas of progress across the business in Q3. After a successful relaunch of Tread+ preorders in Q2, we started delivering Tread+ in Q3. Our logistics and delivery teams exceeded internal expectations for delivery time, delivering 67% of pre-orders in the quarter. We have also made substantial progress in the delivery and installation of Rear Guards requested by members who purchased the Tread+ before the product recall. We're continuing to see growth within the secondary market and are leaning into the opportunity. We recently launched the Peloton History Summary that provides greater visibility to our bike's age, usage, and service history to enhance the secondary market buying experience. Anyone can access a Peloton History Summary for a Bike or Bike+ by searching the serial number on our website. Tread remains a key growth opportunity, and we were thrilled to recently launch the New York Road Runner Collection on Tread and Tread+. This is a series of scenic classes filmed on the TCS New York City Marathon Course. In a first-of-its-kind experience, these classes provide members with the ability to train the Marathon course with auto-incline functionality that matches the course's gradient fluctuations. We are also seeing positive results in service levels and member satisfaction in response to recent initiatives focused on turning around our member experience. These initiatives include investments in our global member support team, improvements to systems and tools, and onboarding new onshore outsourcing partners. We also observed improvements in Net Promoter Scores across multiple Connected Fitness products. Next, I'd like to provide context on our financial outlook for the remainder of the fiscal year. We're lowering our outlook for ending paid Connected Fitness subscriptions by 30,000 or 1% at the guidance midpoint to $2.97 million. Our full year ending Paid Connected Fitness subscription guidance reflects an updated outlook for hardware sales, based on current demand trends and expectations for seasonally lower demand. Q4 is typically our most challenging quarter to grow, due to lower seasonal growth additions as we enter the warmer months of Spring and Summer. We also anticipate a seasonal increase in Paid Connected Fitness subscription churn in Q4, in part due to seasonally higher subscription pause rates that we expect to come down in early fiscal year 2025. We're also lowering our outlook for Ending Paid App Subscriptions by 150,000, or 19%, at the guidance midpoint to 605,000. Our full year Ending App Paid Subscription Guidance reflects lower gross additions due to expectations that Q3 trends continue through Q4. We are maintaining our disciplined approach to app media spend, as we evaluate our app tiers and pricing and refine the paid app subscription acquisition funnel. As a result of trends driving our outlook for Ending Paid Connected Fitness Subscriptions and Ending Paid App Subscriptions, we're lowering our full year revenue guidance by $25 million or 1% at the guidance midpoint to $2.687 billion. We're raising our full year outlook for total gross margin by 50 basis points to 44.5%, primarily due to a revenue mix shift towards our subscription segment. We're also raising our outlook for full year adjusted EBITDA by $37 million at the guidance midpoint to negative $13 million. This increase is largely driven by outperformance from Q3 combined with lower media spend and cost reductions from today's announced restructuring plan. While we are not providing any specific guidance on free cash flow, we do expect to deliver modest positive free cash flow in Q4, despite the timing shift from Q3 and cash outlays related to today's restructuring announcement. We also expect that the cost optimization measures announced today will enable us to drive meaningful free cash flow for the 2025 fiscal year. However, we do expect to have both positive and negative quarters within the year, due to working capital impacts from timing of inventory purchases and seasonality of marketing spend. Before we open the line for questions, I want to reflect on the comment at the end of the shareholder letter about being optimistic about our path forward. First off, I'm pleased that we have finally achieved the critical milestone of becoming free cash flow positives, and I am confident that we will be able to sustain it on a full year basis for fiscal year 2025. I'm also optimistic about the prospect of restructuring our debt and eliminating any potential concerns about the timing of our debt maturities. I'm delighted about our strong NPS for our Connected Fitness products because I believe it reflects the value that our members [see] (ph) in our connected fitness platform and should help drive organic growth for us. And I'm inspired by the dramatically faster pace of product innovation and marketing transformation that we are seeing internally, which I hope we'll be able to tell you all about next quarter. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the important role that Barry McCarthy has played in these accomplishments. During his tenure, Barry successfully re-architected a cost structure that was unsustainable when he arrived. He built a strong and talented leadership team and established a scalable foundation for the business to grow. I'd like to sincerely thank Barry for leading us to this point in Peloton's transformation journey. We have so many reasons for optimism as we move into the next phase of Peloton's transformation focused on returning to profitable growth. And I'm confident that with a stable foundation now in place and with our stellar employees and loyal members, together we will go far.