Thank you, Sam. Great job. Some of you may remember the 1990s uncelebrated film produced by Saturday Night Lives, Lorne Michaels. It was written by Steve Martin, a Canadian. It was called the 3 Amigos, and it featured Chevy Chase, Martin Short and Steve Martin. I won't bore you with the story, but there was a time when Saga also had its own version of the 3 Amigos. In fact, they call themselves that. These 3 Amigos consisted of Saga's founder, Ed Christian, and 2 of his closest friends and consiglieres Dave Stone and Al Lucareli. Unfortunately, all of these amigos have passed on. But the message that the last living member of the Saga amigos gave may before he passed still lives today and drives Saga's operational culture. Just 3.5 short years ago, at Ed Christian's Wake, Al Lucarelli sat down next to me after almost everybody had left the wake and said these words to me. And I quote "Chris, as only the second President and CEO of Saga's ever known, whatever you decide to do next, do it fast, do it with force and do it with purpose." We immediately want to work on the transformational change we've been talking about on these earnings calls for the past 3 years. We began to diversify our top line mix of deliverables, including our e-commerce platform, which is up 16% year-over-year and has created $2.5 million in local direct revenue in our Saga markets in 2025. Our 17 hyperlocal online news sites to complement and add credibility to our over-the-air news product grew year-over-year by 18% and contributed over $2.5 million in revenue and delivered a 31% margin, excluding sales commissions. The 2 blended solutions we use most to get advertisers wanted found and chosen, which are search and display. Search was up 59% year-over-year and generated $2.2 million and targeted display was up year-over-year, 44.8% and accounted for nearly $3.5 million. Online streaming went from a revenue stream designed really simply to over offset third-party streaming costs to transform itself into a robust vertical we rely on heavily. This stream was up 8.6% year-on-year in total. And in all of the digital revenue initiatives, as Sam mentioned earlier, we were up 19.1% year-over-year and growing. We then put into action special capital allocation and capital management plan, which included an ongoing quarterly dividend of $0.25 per share, three $2 special dividends paid to our shareholders on 10/21 of '22, January 13, '23 and January 12, '24 and followed by a $0.60 variable dividend paid on April 7, 2024. Next began a longer-term capital allocation strategy, which included a stock buyback plan. We did this by providing the means to fund this buyback without depleting any of our operational cash on hand or by adding any additional debt to our balance sheet. This entire project and then some was accounted for selling 22 of our Saga's tower sites. This plan also allows Saga to provide additional research and development and the resources necessary to develop our own growing digital platform. While this was going on, we also began and has since continued the process of expanding and diversifying Saga's Board of Directors. We also began to look for ways to cut local market expenses to create a more nimble and efficient operation while we were building the infrastructure of our digital platform. Expense reductions totaled over $1.4 million. We also began the process of selling several nonproductive assets to allow us to obtain a monetized value for the assets that is higher than the amounts recognized in the company's overall market valuation. One example is we listed for sale, the company's owned home located in Sarasota, Florida. This process was delayed, however, due to the timing of several hurricanes that ravaged the Gulf Coast. That has settled down and the market looks much more healthy for a sale. And finally and most importantly, after observing the iterations and reiterations of both our own and those of our brethren, we continue to settle in and teach and train our leadership team and our media advisers on what we refer to now as the blend. The blend is an advertiser focused, not product-focused approach. That relies on a few things we knew and a few other observations we made along the way. Saga's digital transformation strategy is an advertiser first approach that also honors, protects and grows our core competency, which is and always is radio. Now this is not easy. As I've said before, it's been very taxing on our entire operation. It's transformational, but growth requires change and change requires conflict. So so far, the juice is worth the squeeze. So how do we do this? First, by accepting and counting on the fact that radio always and only leads to a search. Radio always and only leads to research, and that's okay. Saga's digital strategy is designed to get our advertisers wanted, found and chosen more often by persuading more buyers and consumers to click on their website, call or visit their business and to search them online. You may wonder, so why sometimes the overzealous confidence in your plan, it really comes from what we know, as I mentioned earlier. And according to eMarketer, of the hundreds of billions of dollars that are spent each year in advertising, nearly 75% of these dollars are being spent on digital advertising. That number is expected to climb over 80% in 2029, just a few short years. Yet radio as an industry has laid claim to a pedestrian 0.067 or a little more than 0.5% of the digital advertising dollars that are spent, which totals in the neighborhood of $2 billion in digital ad revenue. We, radio cannot win or even compete with an approach like this. So we have to do something different. So there's clearly a significant increase in digital ad spending, and it's growing and these buyers are frustrated with unmet needs. They don't like what they're buying or who they have to buy it from. They claim they trust local radio salespeople for most of their market knowledge and advice that aren't buying it from us. Thus, education and training is key for our leadership and for our media advisers. There are too many providers with too many conflicting solutions and businesses don't know who to trust. So in this disruptive market, we need to provide simplicity, clarity and transparency to wins. And there's also a shift happening in the way consumers are buying today in the consumer behavior. Advertising strategies haven't caught up with the journey people take when they buy. There's a gap of tech meets human behavior. The blend closes that -- so in closing, the impact of all the work we have done in training, research and development and overall transformation. Not to mention the results we've seen, has galvanized our Board of Directors, our corporate team, our market leadership teams, our media advisers, our business offices, our on-air teams of content creators and our directors of content creation to finish what we started, hence, the accretive investment Sam discussed and the acquisition of people and expertise to allow us to continue to provide and build a digital strategy that is easy to understand, easy to buy, easy to execute, easy to measure and easy to renew and to buy. So again, as Al Lucarelli said, "Chris, whatever you do, do it fast, do it with purpose and do it with force." That is what we've anticipated doing and have been doing for the last 3.5 years, and we'll continue to do until the job is finished. Sam, do we have any questions?