Thank you, JK and thank you everyone for joining us. I am going to focus my commentary on the first quarter 2025 results compared to the comparable quarter in the prior year, unless otherwise noted. During the first quarter, we grew revenue 5.3% on a constant currency basis with growth across all revenue streams. Our reported revenue was roughly flat year-over-year. We faced a tough comparison from Q1 last year as there was an extra day in February, as well as increased traffic from a successful IP adaptation of Marry My Husband on Amazon Prime. Net loss was $22 million in the quarter compared to net income of $6.2 million in the year prior driven by higher general and administrative expenses due to public company costs and higher marketing expense. Adjusted EBITDA was $4.1 million in the quarter compared to $22.2 million in the same quarter of 2024. As a result, our adjusted earnings per share for the quarter was $0.03 compared to adjusted earnings per share of $0.20 in prior year. Turning to operational health, total company MAU was down 10.5% in the quarter, driven almost entirely by rest of world. As a reminder, Wattpad remains the largest contributor to rest of world MAU. A Wattpad security upgrade in January temporarily affected search engine indexing, causing a dip in search traffic and contributing to a drop in web MAU in February. While we promptly address these settings, we expect to see the impact for another quarter. As we have discussed for the past two quarters, Wattpad also continues to be impacted by a government ban in one country and we are actively working to address concerns expressed by the government. While web novels may generate lower revenue and profitability, they serve as a valuable source of content as we convert popular titles like Marry My Husband to web comics. Web novels also have lower barriers of entry, allowing more creators to showcase their stories on our platform. Millions of creators come to our platform to share their love of writing and storytelling with the world. Wattpad remains the leading global platform for web novels and we are focused on driving growth over time. We continue to be focused on driving web comic app users who are more engaged and present better monetization opportunities. While app MAU decreased by 3.2% overall, we saw a 4.2% increase in web comic app MAU when we removed the impact of web novel users. This growth was led by increases across important English-speaking markets as well as other key countries like France and Thailand. We are particularly pleased to see 19% growth in English platform web comic app MAU ahead of product changes we are introducing in May. We believe these product changes will also drive better user engagement as we make it easier for users to find new titles and read more episodes. Now, I’d like to provide an update on our revenue streams at a consolidated level, starting with paid content. In the quarter, we posted 2.8% revenue growth on a constant currency basis year-over-year. This was driven by our ongoing strength in Japan, offset by declines in Korea and the rest of the world. Additionally, ARPPU growth on a constant currency basis was 8.4% in the quarter, with an increase in all three regions. There is still a great deal of free content available before users get to the paywall and we believe our ARPPU still represents tremendous entertainment value for our users. Advertising posted 13.6% revenue growth in the first quarter on a constant currency basis year-over-year. This strong performance was driven by double-digit constant currency revenue growth in Korea and Japan, offset by a decline in rest of world revenue. In Korea, this growth was the result of increased ad sales from NAVER, while ad sales from other partners were relatively consistent. Japan’s growth was driven by achievement-based ads and pre-roll ads, and in rest of world, the decline was primarily driven by a decline in Wattpad revenue. Finally, our IP adaptation business saw revenue increase 20.7% year-over-year on a constant currency basis in Q1 driven by double-digit revenue growth on a constant currency basis in Korea and triple-digit revenue growth on a constant currency basis in Japan, offset by a double-digit revenue decline on a constant currency basis in rest of world. Now, I’d like to look at our results in the context of core geographies. In Korea, during the first quarter, our revenue grew 3.6% year-over-year on a constant currency basis, primarily driven by double-digit constant currency revenue growth in advertising and IP adaptations, offset by a single-digit constant currency decline in paid content. Korea faced tough comps from last year as the Marry My Husband IP adaptation released on Amazon Prime drove increased traffic to our original web comic. During the first quarter, MAU of $24.2 million decreased 10.3%, MPU of $3.4 million declined 10.6%. That said, we saw healthy 6.7% growth in the first quarter ARPPU on a constant currency basis. Our paying ratio of 14.2% was consistent with the prior year. Starting January 1, 2025, NAVER adjusted their methodology for measuring MAU in Korea. Korea is the only region where NAVER serves as a source of our MAU data. NAVER recently adjusted their methodology for identifying and counting web users for all their services. This change is only related to web MAU in Korea. There is no change in the app MAU numbers and MPU and ARPU are also unaffected. All the other regions are reporting their metrics in the same way as previous quarters. Please see the table in our shareholder letter for a reconciliation with previously reported MAU. Moving to Japan, for the quarter, Japan posted revenue growth on a constant currency basis of 9.4%. This was driven by all three revenue streams as we saw single-digit constant currency revenue growth in paid content, double-digit constant currency revenue growth in advertising, and triple-digit constant currency revenue growth in IP adaptations. As JK mentioned, we are pleased to be number one on Japan’s overall app ranking charts for revenue, including mobile games. Compared to Q1 2024 Japan’s MAU of $21.9 million increased 3.7%, MPU of $2.2 million grew 5.2%, and paying ratio of 10.3% was up 14 basis points year-over-year. Engagement with paid users remains strong. With first quarter ARPU of $23 growing 3.5% year-over-year on a constant currency basis. In the rest of world, we saw revenue decline 4% year-over-year on a constant currency basis in the quarter, driven by declines in paid content, advertising, and IP adaptation. While first quarter MAU and MPU declined 4.9% and 5.9% year-over-year respectively. Paying ratio of 1.6% was up 12 basis points year-over-year. ARPU of $6.50 grew 3.5% year-over-year on a constant currency basis. We’re making significant changes to our English language web comic app, and while it’s early, we believe these changes have been well received by our users. Turning to profitability. Gross profit for the quarter was $71.6 million compared to $82.4 million in the prior year. This resulted in a gross margin of 22% compared to 25.2% in the prior year. There were one-time impacts from a larger SPC expense recognized in cost of revenue, as well as a true up accrual for Japan creator revenue share from the prior year. In addition, free coin marketing expenses in Korea were moved from marketing to cost of revenue starting in Q1. While these discrete items temporarily affect our reported progress on gross margin expansion, we believe our gross margin can improve over time as we execute on our cross border content distribution strategies. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $4.1 million compared to $22.2 million in the prior year, driven by higher general and administrative expenses due to public company costs and higher marketing expense. On the cost side, total G&A expenses for the quarter were $66.7 million as compared to $48.7 million in the prior year quarter, primarily as a result of public company costs. Interest income in the first quarter was $5.1 million compared to $1.2 million in the prior year, and other income was $2.7 million compared to $1.4 million in the prior year period. Income tax expense of $2.5 million in the quarter compared to $6.7 million in the prior year. Depreciation and amortization was $8.4 million compared to $9 million in the prior year. Net loss of $22 million was primarily driven by higher general and administrative expenses due to public company costs and higher marketing expense. As a result, GAAP loss per share was $0.17 compared to earnings per share of $0.6 in the prior year period. Adjusted earnings per share was $0.3 in the quarter compared to adjusted earnings per share of $0.20 in the prior year period. Before I wrap up, I’d like to spend a few moments discussing our second quarter outlook. For the second quarter of 2025, we expect to deliver revenue growth in the range of 2.2% to 5.2% on a constant currency basis. This represents anticipated revenue in the range of $335 million to $345 million. This guidance is based on current FX rates. As we’ve discussed previously, we expect we will face FX headwinds in the first half of this year as rates were more favorable in the first half of 2024. Our infrastructure investments are proceeding on schedule as we prepare for anticipated product improvements in the back half of 2025. We anticipate second quarter adjusted EBITDA in the range of $0.5 million to $5.5 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 0.1% to 1.6%. We expect to maintain our investment in marketing to drive future growth. We also have additional public company expenses this quarter that we did not have in the year ago quarter as a private company. J.K. noted this earlier, but I would like to reiterate that we are monitoring the market health of our users closely and believe in the resilience of our business model, regardless of the current macroeconomic uncertainty. In addition to the free content our users can already enjoy, with or without ads, we believe we deliver a tremendous amount of entertainment value with flexible price points made up of many micro transactions. In closing, we believe we are off to a great start to the year. While there remains a lot of work ahead of us, the first quarter laid a strong foundation to the year, and we have many anticipated developments we’re encouraged about in 2025. We remain focused on executing our strategy, underpinned by our powerful flywheel of creators, content, and users, which we believe will generate profitable growth over the long-term. With that, I’d like to turn it back to our operator to begin the Q&A session.