Thank you, Ben, and thank you for everyone joining us for our earnings call this morning. I'm pleased to report another set of strong results for the quarter, fully in line with our expectations. As we look forward, we expect to achieve our full year guidance on all metrics as growth accelerates, margins expand, leverage declines and cash flows continue to strengthen. Our net revenue grew an industry-leading 8% and ex advocacy grew by 10%. On top of this growth, we achieved a swing of $122 million of operating cash flow improvement, continued to expand our top client relationships and scooped up significant new business. We expect growth to accelerate in the second half of the year as the economic outlook is positive, large new clients are coming online and client churn typically drops off after the first half of the year. While digital transformation of other companies is lagging, ours is booming. While most of the others are struggling with new business, our pipeline is robust and growing. While others are cutting thousands of workers, we are picking up key talent from holdcos, including 10 major new executives for our media businesses with vast big client experience. Today, I'm pleased to announce the hiring of Slavi Samardzija, who is joining us this fall from Omnicom's Annalect to work on our forward-looking data strategy. He joins a team of executives hired from companies, including IBM, Accenture and Microsoft. We'll have more news on this soon. This is an incredible time of opportunity for Stagwell. In an industry of behemoths having trouble with their scale, we are just the right size to adapt to the coming revolution of AI. We're investing about $20 million a quarter of OpEx and adapting to new technologies and building state-of-the-art offerings. Discipline by discipline, we're adopting AI, applying it to tasks that can be streamlined or reimagined. In media, we're developing agents that deploy targeted media and will streamline our operations and costs. In communications, we have bots that assemble influencer campaigns, write press releases and pitch stories. In research, we're already deploying dashboards that read and analyze survey data for our clients on the basis of simple prompts and questions. In our creative companies, we're using AI to dream up and produce unique, standout ads with incredible new special effects. We are building and deploying in partnership with Adobe, the Stagwell content supply chain management system and wrapping up all our tools and software into the machine, a central nervous system designed to connect data, people, teams and software tools across the Stagwell network. The machine addresses a clear client need, a single unified platform for accessing all our services. We're already beginning to roll out these systems and expect them to have fully deployed by early 2026. They will dramatically increase efficiency, adopt new ways of working and likely reduce cost by about 15%. Nothing shows that our tech-first approach is resonating more than growth among our top 25 customers. Our top 25 in the second quarter generated over $175 million in net revenue. That same cohort a year ago generated $140 million, an increase of 26% year-on-year. Our top 25 customers now average approximately $28 million in annual net revenue. Our top 100 clients grew similarly in size. Historically, from 1980 to 2005, a company like ours would be judged solely by its total growth with organic growth relevant only in the later stages of scale and maturity when such scale accelerates organic opportunities. Because of high quarterly variations, I suggested that analysts should look at our mix of organic growth annually, and we adopted total growth as our primary guidance metric. I still believe that. But in the interest of transparency, we will continue to report all metrics each quarter. While we achieved our overall 10% ex advocacy growth this quarter, 20% of it or 2% was from purely organic growth. But as we saw last year, we have a cycle of lower organic growth in H1 as that's when clients churn and higher organic growth in H2 when media and other clients tend to increase their spend. With new assignments from GM, Visa, Adobe and Target, we expect a similar pattern this year in which organic growth will again grow to high single and near double digits in H2. We're about 3 points ahead of last year in organic growth. And given that trend, we expect to hit the overall growth numbers and for most of it to be organic when the year is over and the dust has settled. Importantly, our digital transformation capability grew 12% ex advocacy with organic growth ex advocacy of 7% in the quarter. This is a sharp contrast to the lagging performance seen in the larger digital transformation industry. Clients are beginning to incorporate AI in their consumer experiences and the Code and Theory Network is becoming a supplier of choice, having been named Digital Innovation Agency of the Year by campaign. Our major tech clients grew 11% this quarter and 5 of our top 6 clients are mega tech companies. People seem to tie our fortunes to tunes to tariffs and other old economy measures. We are a tech company's tech company and most affected by the ups and downs of that industry. Further evidence of AI being good for our business is reflected in that the Marketing Cloud grew 38% ex advocacy. In 2Q, in particular, the Harris Quest suite of research projects grew organically 100%. As we look across our agencies, many are performing strongly. The second quarter saw a leading creative agencies, 72andSunny, grew net revenues 19% year-over-year. Research firm NRG grew 13%, media buying business Assembly grew 7% and digital transformation agency Kettle grew 41%. Net new business was a standout once again, we delivered $117 million in the quarter, the fifth consecutive period, eclipsing the $100 million mark and bringing our trailing 12-month figure to $451 million. Wins with Samsung, New Balance, ServiceNow and Volkswagen highlight the momentum as we continue to take share from legacy players. This quarter also saw our first wins in the newly formed government contracts division, which is beginning to come online with multiple pitches in the final stages. Allison+Partners signed a 3-year agreement with Covered California to help the state health insurance marketplace maximize the number of Californians enrolled in health insurance. We also delivered $93 million in adjusted EBITDA in the quarter, representing a 16% margin, flat versus prior year. But excluding advocacy, our adjusted EBITDA increased more than 23% year-over-year to $80 million. Adjusting for our cloud investment of $18 million this quarter, our second-quarter margin would have been about 18.5%, representing a 300-basis-point improvement from a year ago. And our adjusted EPS also increased by more than 20% year-over-year to $0.17. The quarter also included the marketing effort, all the travel expenses of Sport Beach, our annual Cannes Lions Festival experience that brings together brands and world-class athletes. This continues to be so successful that it's becoming a business of its own as we create these experiences at different venues. Athletes like Serena Williams, Billie Jean King, Sir Mo Farah, Jordan Chiles and Alex Rodriguez participated. Our focus on cash management is paying off. Through a combination of implementation of technology for greater cash visibility, greater oversight of our brands and successful renegotiation of payment terms with vendors, we've seen our cash flow from operations improve by $122 million year-to-date, setting us to achieve fully our goal of 45% free cash flow conversion at the end of the year. We're able to achieve a net leverage of 3.18x, a significant improvement over the same point last year when leverage stood at 3.48 and putting us on course to finish the year with net leverage in the 2s. This quarter, we invested in our stock, repurchasing almost 10 million shares at very attractive multiples. We also completed the acquisition of previously announced ADK GLOBAL in the second quarter, giving us offices in 10 new Asia Pacific markets, aligning with our strategy of increasing global scale. And we took steps to strengthen our shopper and retail marketing by acquiring JetFuel. M&A remains a key growth driver for Stagwell moving forward, but we do expect to slow down our outside acquisitions through the rest of the year. Our focus is on integrating the raft of companies acquired over the last 18 months and scaling important technology initiatives to drive growth and efficiency. AI will most likely have the most direct impact on the production of mass content, which is a relatively small part of our business as we tend to design premium content and develop the overall creative strategies. However, to reduce outside expenditures and stay current in production, we formally launched Unreasonable Studios, our award-winning in-house production and content creative company. It unites capabilities for multiple agencies into a centralized content production service. The team is already partnering with brands like Google, Starbucks, HOKA, Louis Vuitton, and Marriott to deliver everything from generative tech-driven content at scale to Netflix-quality original documentaries. We're continuing to work in partnership with Palantir to develop state-of-the-art data targeting as we develop the Stagwell ID Graph, and we are testing it with clients now. All of these new tools and systems will significantly upgrade our media offerings to be fully competitive against the majors when it comes to digital marketing, which in the world of AI is driven not by scale, but by effective technology, and that's exactly what we're developing. This quarter, we also announced the rebranding of the Stagwell Marketing Cloud to simply the Marketing Cloud. This new branding encourages use by other agencies and facilitates potential spin-off at the right time. You can check out the breadth of the new products, all available on a single platform by logging on to www.themarketingcloud.com. In sum, we are well-positioned for a successful second half, building on a strong half as first -- as new business continues to build, client size keeps increasing, digital transformation continues to grow, AI is being deployed and the company improves in terms of cash, leverage, margin and costs. As a result, we are reaffirming our guidance today. With that, I would like to hand it over to Frank Lanuto, EVP of Finance and Ryan Greene, our new CFO, to walk through some of our financial results in more detail.