Thank you, Chris. First, I'd like to touch on how we are tracking against the cost restructuring plan we announced at our last earnings call back in May. We made substantial progress toward achieving our plan to deliver over $200 million in run rate cost savings by the end of fiscal '25, delivering approximately $15 million of cost savings in the quarter. Roughly $11 million of the cost savings came from payroll reductions, and the remaining $4 million came from other non-payroll savings. We remain on track to achieve the full $200 million in run rate cost savings by the end of the fiscal year. We also expect to deliver additional efficiency through reductions to media expenses that are not part of the restructuring plan, and we continue to look for opportunities to further reduce our operating costs and improve our working capital efficiency. Now let's spend a few minutes on our Q4 results. We ended the quarter with $2.98 million paid connected fitness subscribers, reflecting a net decrease of $75,000 in the quarter. This exceeded the high end of our guidance range as a result of higher-than-expected gross additions in first-party, third-party retail, and secondary market channels. Average net monthly paid connected fitness subscription churn was 1.9%, which was in line with internal expectations and up roughly 10 basis points year-over-year. We ended the fourth quarter with 615,000 paid app subscriptions, reflecting a net decrease of $59,000 in the quarter. This result exceeded the high end of our guidance range primarily from favorable average monthly paid app subscription churn, which was 8.4% in the quarter. While app churn was down roughly 80 basis points quarter-over-quarter in Q4, we anticipated churn to remain somewhat elevated in the quarter due to the roll-off of subscribers associated with a specific corporate wellness client that did not renew their agreement. As Chris discussed earlier, we are continuing to invest in new content and features for the app, focused on enhancing our strengths content offerings, personalization, and social features. While we develop these enhancements, which we believe will result in a significant improvement in our overall app experience over time, we are reducing the amount of media spend supporting growth in paid app subscriptions for now to maximize our media efficiency. Total revenue was $644 million in the quarter, comprising $212 million of connected fitness segment revenue and $431 million of subscription segment revenue. Total revenue was slightly above the high end of our 618 million to 643 million guidance range and up modestly year-over-year by 0.2%. Total gross profit was $312 million in the fourth quarter, yielding a growth margin of 48.5%, which was above the high-end of our guidance range. Our connected fitness segment gross margin was 8.3%, ahead of our internal expectations. This included $10.7 million of inventory write-offs for excess and returned inventory, excluding the impact of inventory write-offs and one-time COGS items. Adjusted connected fitness growth margin was 10.2%, expanding over 15 percentage points compared to the same period a year ago. Total operating expenses, including restructuring and impairment expenses, were $375 million in the fourth quarter, compared to $427 million for the period a year ago. Sales and marketing expense decreased $26 million versus the year-ago period, reflecting lower spending on media, retail showrooms, and brand and creative spend. Research and development expense decreased $2.8 million versus the year-ago period, primarily driven by reductions in business operations and product development and research costs. General and administrative expense increased by $23 million versus the year-ago period, driven by an increase in stock-based compensation, primarily related to expense recognized in connection with the CEO transition, partially offset by lower depreciation and amortization expense. This quarter, we recognized $7.8 million of impairment and restructuring expense, of which $8.2 million was non-cash. The non-cash charges were primarily driven by impairment losses related to connected fitness assets. The cash charges were primarily driven by a $3.5 million benefit to severance and other personnel costs due to reversals and severance accruals, which were partially offset by $3.1 million relating to exit and disposal costs and professional fees. Adjusted EBITDA was $70 million in the fourth quarter, a $105 million improvement from the period a year ago. We generated $26 million in free cash flow in the quarter, the second consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow, something we haven't accomplished since the second quarter of fiscal year 2021. We ended the quarter with $698 million in unrestricted cash and cash equivalents. We also have access to a $100 million revolving credit facility, which remains undrawn to date. Overall, our Q4 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. Next, I'd like to provide context on our financial outlook for the first quarter and fiscal year 2025. Our guidance for first quarter fiscal 2025 ending paid connected fitness subscriptions reflects an expected year-over-year decline in hardware sales based on multiple factors. From a market perspective, the first quarter is typically a seasonally low quarter for hardware sales as consumers shift their discretionary spending toward categories like travel and sporting goods during the summer months. We also expect continued sales headwinds as a result of an uncertain macroeconomic environment. Additionally, with our focus on improving profitability, our sales outlook reflects some decisions we've made that we expect to have an impact on our hardware sales in the quarter. We are reducing sales and marketing spend year-over-year as we continue to focus on optimizing media spend. We have also decided to run fewer promotions within the quarter compared to the same period last year. And as Karen previously mentioned, we made the decision to no longer offer a rental option for our original bike starting August 1, due to limited refurbished bike inventory available. While we are not providing specific guidance on average net monthly paid connected fitness churn, we expect our churn rate to be relatively similar to Q4 fiscal 2024. Our first quarter paid app subscription guidance reflects an expected sequential decline in gross additions due to seasonality coupled with sequential improvement in average monthly paid app subscription churn. We expect our churn rate to improve quarter over quarter due to stabilization in our corporate wellness paid app subscription base. Our first quarter revenue guidance reflects the impact of these hardware sales and subscription trends combined with our business decisions to improve profitability. We expect a sequential increase in first quarter total growth margin as a result of a seasonal mix toward our subscription segment. We also expect significant year-over-year improvement in first quarter adjusted EBITDA mainly due to lower sales and marketing expense and continued progress toward achieving our $200 million cost reduction plan. Our full year fiscal 2025 guidance reflects the expectation that hardware sales will decline year-over-year as well as an expectation that average net monthly paid connected fitness churn will continue to increase modestly year-over-year and follow our historical seasonal patterns. Our full year guidance range for paid connected fitness subscriptions reflects a broad range of outcomes. We will continue to refine our strategy over the course of the fiscal year which may include potential changes in pricing, promotional strategies, and other levers we may pull to achieve our financial targets. Any changes in these areas may affect our gross additions for paid connected fitness subscriptions and paid app subscriptions across the fiscal year. Additionally, as we continue to improve our member experience, we see clear opportunities to improve engagement which could result in improvement to our average net monthly paid churn rates for both connected fitness and apps. While we are optimistic, we can improve engagement through product and content innovation and evolving our marketing strategy, the timing of when we will start to see meaningful impact from these efforts is uncertain. Our guidance for paid app subscriptions reflects a year-over-year decline at the midpoint. We have made the decision to reduce our media spending supporting the app while we invest in innovating the product to improve the member experience and lower churn. Most importantly, our focus for fiscal 2025 is on delivering our key financial results which include revenue, gross margin, and adjusted EBITDA. We are prioritizing these metrics along with delivering free cash flow. Our revenue outlook is tempered by uncertainty surrounding our ability to efficiently grow paid connected fitness and app subscribers including an assumption that our investments in new initiatives will not deliver any upside to subscriber growth within the fiscal year as well as an uncertain macroeconomic outlook. Gross margin is expected to improve year-over-year as a result of connected fitness growth margin expansion as well as revenue mixed shift toward our subscription segment. Our adjusted EBITDA guidance of $200 million to $250 million reflects continued improvements in profitability largely due to gross margin expansion, the operating cost savings we expect to achieve related to our previously announced cost restructuring plan, and lower year-over-year media spend. We also expect to deliver meaningful free cash flow on a full-year basis of at least $75 million. It is worth noting that we do expect Q1 free cash flow to be negative due to timing of inventory payments as we build up inventory to support the holiday season in Q2. Our outlook for fiscal year 2025 reflects our prioritization of improving profitability and delivering meaningful free cash flow. Our improved bottom line financials enable us to focus on innovation in a more strategic way. We remain optimistic about the investments we are making in our software and hardware innovation and also evolving our content offerings. We look forward to sharing more about new product features and fitness experiences in upcoming quarters. As we test new fitness and wellness offerings to meet our members' needs, we're allowing time to learn and iterate to ensure that our offerings have signals of strong product market fit before we scale them. As a result, our outlook does not assume subscriber growth from these new initiatives in fiscal 2025. And with our cost structure better aligned to the current size of our business and a planned path to sustainable positive free cash flow, we now have a solid foundation in place that we can build upon to drive long-term profitable growth and shareholder value. And now I'd like to turn it back to Chris for some closing remarks.