Thanks, Matt, and good morning. I will start with a review of our financial performance and then provide more information on our outlook for 2026, each under our new segment reporting. As a reminder, all growth rates are relative to the comparable period in 2025 unless noted otherwise. Q4 consolidated revenue was $411,000,000, flat with a year ago, and in line with our expectations. Revenue growth in Experiences and The Fork came in at the high end of our guidance range, but was offset by slightly lower revenue performance in Hotels and Other. Full year consolidated revenue was $1,900,000,000 or 3% growth. Q4 consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $45,000,000 or 11% of revenue, which was at the low end of our expectations. In the quarter, we saw an opportunity to capture incremental demand through increased marketing investment, which we believe will benefit Experiences growth in 2026. Full year consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $319,000,000 or 17% of revenue. Experiences and The Fork both delivered adjusted EBITDA margin expansion that was more than offset by deleverage from Hotels and Other. Before discussing segment performance, I would like to briefly review the key changes to our new segment reporting. This morning, we posted materials with a detailed explanation of the changes and recast of historical periods. I would like to make a few key points on the changes. In the Viator sec in Experiences segment, revenue and all related metrics are the same as our prior Viator segment reporting. Adjusted EBITDA reflects all costs associated with entirety of our Experiences business, including the fixed and variable costs for both the Viator and Tripadvisor, Inc. points of sale. Therefore, there is no longer intersegment Experiences revenue because the new Experience segment reflects the full P&L for both brands. In Hotels and Other segment, revenue and adjusted EBITDA includes all revenue and fixed and variable costs included in the prior brand Tripadvisor, Inc. segment, less any revenue and costs associated with the Tripadvisor, Inc. Experiences point of sale. The FORQ segment remains unchanged. Certain shared group costs are allocated across the segments consistent with our prior segment reporting approach. Now turning to the results in each segment for Q4. In our Experiences segment, the number of Experiences booked grew 18%, which was at the high end of our expectations. Bookings growth in our owned and operated platforms, Viator and Tripadvisor, Inc., accelerated faster than the overall segment as we continue to lead into coordinated marketing investments across the brands, driving increased conversion. In North America, our largest source market, we saw another quarter of sequential acceleration, a positive sign that our combined brand approach is delivering results. Bookings volume growth from third-party points of sale remained higher than overall segment, though it stepped down sequentially as we began lapping a period of high growth from third-party merchant partners that began scaling in Q4 2024. Experiences gross booking value, or GBV, grew 16% in Q4, a modest sequential acceleration to approximately $980,000,000. We also saw faster GBV acceleration in our owned and operated points of sale. Q4 Experiences revenue grew 10% to $204,000,000, a slight acceleration from 9% growth in Q3. The difference in growth between GBV, bookings volume, and revenue continues to be driven by higher bookings volume growth from third-party merchant partners. However, this gap narrowed in Q4. Changes in FX positively impacted both GBV and revenue growth by approximately three percentage points. Revenue for the full year grew 10% to $924,000,000. We were pleased the sequential acceleration in both GBV and bookings volume growth through the year, with GBV reaching more than $4,700,000,000 for the full year. While the progression of total GBV demonstrates our meaningful scale in the category, we are also operating with consistently improving unit economics. Repeat bookings continue to be our fastest growing cohort, comprising the majority of our GBV, and represent our most profitable customer base. We are managing our business prudently to balance growth and profitability progression while investing for long-term competitive positioning. The financial performance we delivered in 2025, the momentum we are carrying into 2026, reflect the resiliency of our financial model and the strength of loyal loyal booker cohorts maturing at scale. We believe the diversity of our brands and business model is an advantage and uniquely positions us for sustainable leadership in the category. Viator and supervisor represent a significant majority of total segment GBV, with Viator contributing the bulk of GBV. Viator and Tripadvisor, Inc. leverage a shared industry-leading supply asset that we merchandise to each audience and increasingly in a more personalized way through data and AI. We also leverage our supply to reach incremental audiences through third-party demand partners. This set of distribution channels is diverse and growing fast, serving thousands of partners globally, extending our reach beyond our core markets. Importantly, bookings from third-party partners are immediately profitable on every transaction. In terms of channel mix on our owned and operated platforms, our direct channels are growing the fastest as a result of our investments in supply and product that convert first-time bookers to loyal repeat cohorts. Importantly, unlike our legacy Hotels offering where we faced SEO headwinds, SEO is not a large channel for us in Experiences, and we expect this channel to contribute less than 10% of GBV as we exit 2026. We will continue to leverage both of our brands in the paid channels to attract high-intent new bookers while testing new paid channels that diversify our investment mix from SEM. Experiences adjusted EBITDA in Q4 was $15,000,000, 7% of revenue, down from $29,000,000 last year. We anticipated deleverage in the quarter due to a known indirect tax benefit of approximately $4,000,000 realized last year. Additionally, in service of our strategic focus increasing our execution velocity as we enter 2026, we made incremental investments in the quarter to accelerate bookings while continuing to invest in engineering, data, and AI to drive product and supply enhancements that we believe will benefit growth and competitive differentiation in the medium term. For the full year, Experiences adjusted EBITDA was $91,000,000 or a 10% margin, which we believe makes us the most profitable scaled Experiences platform in the world. This adjusted EBITDA profile demonstrates our financial discipline, exhibiting strong and improving unit economics while continuing to invest for future growth. Turning now to The Fork. Revenue in Q4 was $57,000,000 or 18% growth and 9% growth in constant currency. Total bookings in our B2C channel grew 9%. While a smaller contributor, our B2B subscription revenue grew at a much higher rate driven by ongoing restaurant adoption of higher-priced premium plans, highlighting the strong value proposition The Fork delivers to restaurants. On a full-year basis, revenue was $221,000,000, representing 22% growth and 17% constant currency. Adjusted EBITDA at The Fork in Q4 was $1,000,000 or 2% of revenue, approximately 150 basis points higher than last year, driven primarily by leverage in marketing and overall fixed costs. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA was $21,000,000 or a margin of 9%, a meaningful improvement of over 600 basis points driven by prudent fixed cost management while delivering strong revenue growth. In Hotels and Other, Q4 revenue was $151,000,000, a decline of 15% which we anticipated given the impact of structural demand headwinds in this category. As we mentioned last quarter, we are managing our Hotels offering offerings to optimize for profitability rather than chase low-margin revenue. As a result of product improvements we have made, Hotel Meta pricing continued to be strong due to high-quality travel intent our platform is delivering to our Hotels and OTA partners. Structural traffic headwinds also continue to impact our media and advertising offerings, with revenue declining 17% in Q4 to $30,000,000. For the full year, Hotels and Other revenue declined 8% to $750,000,000. Adjusted EBITDA in the Hotel and Other category was nearly $30,000,000 or 20% of revenue. Lower personnel costs related to our cost savings program we announced last quarter partially offset the lower revenue stemming from SEO headwinds, which is driving a higher mix of revenue from paid channels. Full year adjusted EBITDA was $270,000,000 or 28% revenue. Turning to consolidated expenses starting with the quarter and for the full year. Cost of revenue in Q4 was 9% of revenue, up almost 200 basis points year over year due to the benefit of last year of indirect tax credit. For the full year, cost of revenue was 8% of revenue, with last year. Marketing costs in Q4 were 43% of revenue, higher by approximately 550 basis points year over year due to marketing investment in Experiences. For the full year, marketing was 42% of revenue, deleverage of approximately 200 basis points which is largely driven by revenue headwinds at Hotel and Other. Importantly, Experiences improved its marketing leverage for the full year by approximately 130 basis points. Personnel costs in Q4 were 32% of revenue, lower by approximately 300 basis points year over year. Lower personnel costs were largely driven by the previously announced gross cost savings program, primarily impacting Hotels and Other. Absent share-based compensation, personnel costs as a percent of revenue was lower by approximately 200 basis points. For the full year, personnel costs were 30% of revenue, lower by approximately 200 basis points or 100 basis points absent share-based compensation. Technology costs in Q4 at 6% of revenue were approximately flat with last year. The full-year technology costs were flat with last year as well. G&A as a percent of revenue in Q4 was approximately flat with last year. On a full-year basis, G&A as a percent of revenue was lower by a little over 100 basis points. Now turning to cash and liquidity. For the full year, operating cash flow was $245,000,000 and free cash flow was $163,000,000. The increase in operating cash flow and free cash flow were driven primarily by changes in working capital as a result of lapping the impact of last year's nonrecurring tax settlement. Total cash and cash equivalents at December 31 were approximately $1,000,000,000. Our cash balance includes approximately $350,000,000 in Term Loan B proceeds raised in 2025, which we plan to use to pay our outstanding convertible notes due in April. After taking into account deferred merchant payables of approximately $308,000,000 and a $350,000,000 term loan, our remaining excess cash balance is approximately $377,000,000. During the fourth quarter, we repurchased 3,300,000 shares at an average cost per share of $15.14, a total of $50,000,000. Over the course of the year, we have repurchased 6,100,000 shares pursuant to our program totaling approximately $90,000,000 at an average price per share of $14.72. Today, we have approximately $110,000,000 remaining in our share repurchase authorization. Combined with the LTRIP transaction earlier in the year, we have reduced share count by approximately 21% since 2024. We believe that our current cash profile and net leverage levels reflect strong capital structure with appropriate cash for operating needs. Turning now to our outlook for 2026 and Q1. For the full year, we expect modest consolidated revenue growth, which reflects the ongoing mix shift we are driving towards our growth marketplace businesses. Our marketplace growth, which we believe is outpacing the overall travel market and the category growth rates where we operate, continues to be offset by structural traffic headwinds impacting our legacy Hotels and media advertising business. We expect the mix of our marketplace businesses to continue to grow meaningfully and represent approximately two thirds of our consolidated revenue as we exit 2026. Experiences revenue alone is expected to comprise over half of our consolidated revenue. In addition, we expect quarterly performance throughout 2026 to reflect higher seasonality trends that are inherent in scaled travel marketplace businesses as Experiences and The Fork become a larger portion of our consolidated revenue. Now some brief commentary on each of the segments for the full year 2026. Starting with Experiences. We expect accelerating growth in bookings, GBV, and revenue in our Viator and TurboVisor points of sale and slowing growth in our 3P points of sale as we continue to lap the steep ramp in this channel. As a result of this mix shift, we expect approximately flat bookings volume growth in the year over year for the segment. We expect GMV and revenue growth to accelerate with revenue growth in the low teens. Importantly, we expect to exit the year at a higher revenue growth rate relative to the start of the year as combined marketing, product, and supply effort gained momentum. At The Fork, we expect revenue growth in the low to mid-teens. This growth rate reflects solid volume-driven bookings growth in the B2C business and healthy expansion in our premium software, driving B2B growth above 20%. Segment growth expectations include an estimated currency benefit of 400 basis points on current rates. In Hotels and Other, we have taken a prudent approach based on the more pronounced trends we observed the second half of last year. As a result, our current expectations are for mid to high teens revenue declines largely driven by SEO traffic headwinds and our focus on maintaining consistent ROIs in the paid channels within Hotel Meta. Our Hotel Meta performance is lapping a difficult comp in the first half of this year, as we observed strong pricing last year. By the second half of the year, we expect to see some stabilization in segment revenue declines as we lap easier comps. Turning to consolidated EBITDA, we expect to deliver flat to modest margin expansion alongside mid-single-digit EBITDA growth, driven by our marketplace businesses and a year-in-year impact from our cost savings program we announced on our last call, offsetting anticipated declines in our Hotels and Other segment. We expect our marketplace businesses to contribute approximately 50% of our overall EBITDA, up from 35% in 2025, with Experiences adjusted EBITDA alone expected to contribute approximately 40% of the total. On a segment basis, for the full year adjusted EBITDA, in Experiences, we expect margins to expand between 300 and 400 basis, which implies healthy adjusted EBITDA growth, primarily due to greater market efficiencies driven by strong repeat cohorts and by operating our two brands in a more coordinated manner. Adjusted EBITDA will be back-half weighted due to the typical seasonality in marketing investment in Q1 relative to large seasonal travel period in Q3. At The Fork, we expect to deliver margin expansion between 200 and 300 points, primarily due to more efficient marketing mix and continued fixed cost leverage. Finally, in Hotels and Other, we expect adjusted EBITDA margin to decline by between 150 and 250 basis points as we continue to manage this business on both variable and fixed cost despite anticipated revenue declines. Turning now to our outlook for Q1. We expect consolidated revenue to be down by 3% to 5% year over year. Despite continued growth in our marketplace businesses, the anticipated declines in our legacy offering pressure overall growth, in particular, given that Q1 is seasonally low revenue in our marketplace and therefore, its weighting on consolidated revenue is lower. However, we expect to see consolidated revenue acceleration throughout the year as our marketplace businesses continue to increase their share of group revenue mix. On a segment basis, we expect Experiences items growth in the low teens, which is due to the lapping of strong 3P growth last year. Despite solid growth in our Viator and Tripadvisor, Inc. points of sale, revenue is expected to accelerate by approximately 1% to 2% sequentially in part due to the aforementioned investment we made in Q4. We expect revenue growth at The Fork of between 20–22%, which includes a currency benefit of approximately 12 percentage points. We expect Hotels and Other declines of approximately 21% to 23% due to a continuation of recent trends and a more difficult year-over-year compare in pricing that we expect to erase in the second half. We expect consolidated Q1 adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 3% to 5%. Step down is due to the aforementioned revenue headwinds in Hotels and Other segment, as well as growth investments in Experiences this quarter. In Experiences, we expect our adjusted EBITDA margins to step back by approximately 200 basis points year over year primarily due to an increased marketing investment. At The Fork, we expect margins to swing positive year over year, increasing approximately 800 basis points to about 1% of revenue, benefiting from marketing efficiencies expected in the quarter. In Hotels and Other, we expect adjusted EBITDA margin between 21–23%, which reflects revenue headwinds previously discussed. We are excited about 2026 and the priorities we have established to continue to extend our leadership in global Experiences. We expect to see the increased impact of its contribution to our group finish profile this year, establishing a foundation for multiyear group revenue acceleration while delivering healthy levels of profitability. We look forward to updating you on our progress on our next call. With that, I turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.