Thank you, Sam. As promised, Saga continues to pursue a digital strategy that has been carefully curated to focus on the needs of the consumer based on a deep understanding of consumer behavior and when they interact with an advertising message and a digital advertising marketplace that is simply broken and ripe for disruption. Saga's click, visit, call and search approach provides the advertiser with an easy-to-understand, easy-to-use and easy-to-buy solution to get the advertiser wanted, found and chosen, ultimately resulting in more sales and higher customer retention. Saga's digital strategy helps us differentiate ourselves from other digital solutions by providing higher margin, lower attrition and customer-focused solutions versus the product-oriented offerings that currently exist in much of our current digital marketplace. And it all starts with radio, the best, most efficient medium to persuade the consumer to take action. How and why is this digital marketplace ripe for disruption? Several reasons. Number one, there's a significant increase in digital ad spend. There are frustrated buyers with unmet needs. Advertisers are simply fed up with inefficient ad campaigns and empty promises. They don't like what they are buying and who they're buying it from. And there is a fragmented and confused advertising marketplace as well. There are just too many providers, too many conflicting solutions, businesses don't know who they can trust. And in this case, simplicity and clarity win. There's a shift in consumer behavior. Digital advertising strategies have not caught up with the journey people take when they buy a product or service. In other words, there's a gap where tech meets human behavior. The problem Saga is solving with its rapidly growing digital strategy is to provide our customers with the digital advertising solutions that are, as I said earlier, easy to understand, easy to buy, easy to use and most importantly, all hyper-targeted on a highly qualified real consumer. This, along with easy-to-understand attribution metrics focused on the actions consumers take that lead to a sale. And again, radio is a star. Radio is the magic top-of-funnel medium that provides persuasive messaging, leads the consumer to a search and starts the consumer buying journey. We call it click, visit, call and search. Saga's radio stations get the advertiser wanted and Saga's digital platform gets the advertiser found and chosen. And by the way, this isn't new money. The available digital money that is being spent as we speak by customers of ours who like and trust us, but only with their radio spend. The teaching and training we've been doing over the past year plus is to give our leadership team and our media advisers the intellectual currency. They need to show our customers that we are confident enough in the digital space using the consumer journey to be trusted with enormous amounts of money they are already investing in digital advertising. And like the digital dollars being spent, the consumer journey is not a new phenomenon either. Since the early days of advertising, there has been a consumer journey. The delivery system just changed. For example, today, the consumer here's an ad with a compelling persuasive message and goes on a search for that message on Google. And the consumer is served with display ads consistent with the ad they heard on the radio to remind and persuade them to choose the advertiser being promoted instead of their competitor. Conversely, in the early years of advertising, the consumer hears an ad with a compelling persuasive message, then goes on the search this time in the yellow pages. And those yellow pages, the consumer served with display ads in the form of a half page or full-page ad in red and black ink versus just black ink with a message that makes the ad stand out and is consistent with the ad they heard on the radio to remind them and persuade them to choose the advertiser being promoted instead of their competitor. You see it. It's very similar. This isn't a new revolutionary process, and this isn't new money. We are simply more confident, and we are gaining the trust of the customers who already trusted us with their radio advertising to allow us to guide them through the consumer journey and to trust us with their digital advertising money. One example is our cluster in Columbus, Ohio, had previously won a $750,000-plus click visit and call search order from a brand-new advertiser. Then just this week, they received a call from the very same client saying they had given a second piece of their digital business to one of our competitors, primarily because the client had an advertising relationship with our competitor and wanted to give them a shot with a separate portion of their digital ad spend. The client then expressed that our competitor could not deliver on the promises they made when given the business in the first place, and that they were pulling the business and giving it all back to us, another $298,000. This single client with one campaign in one single market now represents over $1 million in radio, search and display. This is the largest single order from one client in one market that I personally have ever seen in my 45-year advertising career. So why are we doing this? Willie Sutton wants to ask, why you rob banks? And you know what he said. He said because that's where the money is. According to eMarketer, in 2024, there were $421 billion spent on advertising in the United States. 74% or $309 billion were spent in digital and $91 billion on search alone. In 2025, the total number is expected to rise to $456 billion and 75% of total ad spend or $342 billion being spent on digital advertising. And by 2029, in only 4 short years, digital percentage of total ad spend is projected to be at 83%. So the cavern is widening. Currently, radio's percentage of the total ad spend is a mere 5.6% and radio's percentage of total ad spend is a pedestrian -- radio percentage of total digital ad spend is a pedestrian 0.067% or $2 billion. We simply cannot grow with 5.6% of total ad spend and a little more than one half 1% in the total digital ad spend. We have to do it differently. And transformational change is hard. I've said this before. It takes time, it takes money and it takes great resolve. And if we can capture just 5% of the available digital dollars in our Saga 28 markets over the next 18 to 24 months, we believe we can double our gross total annual revenue, most of it digital, and at the same time, while we are preserving and protecting and growing radio. Sam, do we have any questions?