Turning to slide 10. The chart on the left shows the last five quarters of fiber service address delivery, which strengthened throughout the year. Our address cadence quarter over quarter reflects seasonality, but it also highlights the actions we took to increase crew counts in the second half of the year. In addition, A-CAM activity contributed to this acceleration, as those builds started to ramp in the fourth quarter. As Ken mentioned, Q4 represents our highest production quarter since 2023, demonstrating the momentum we are seeing in our fiber build engine. On the right, you can see the continued expansion of our fiber footprint. Over the last three years, we have nearly doubled the number of fiber addresses across our markets. Turning to the next slide, the chart on the left shows the last five quarters of residential fiber net adds. In the fourth quarter, we delivered over 15,000 residential fiber net adds, representing year-over-year as well as sequential improvement. This growth reflects the investments we have made in fiber address delivery during the year. The chart on the right highlights the growth in our residential fiber connections, which have also nearly doubled over the last three years. This growth is driven by ongoing footprint expansion, as well as copper-to-fiber conversions. We expect fiber connections to grow as we continue to expand our fiber footprint. Turning to slide 12, average residential revenue per connection was up 2% year over year. As we have seen across the industry, fewer broadband customers are choosing to bundle with video, which puts downward pressure on this metric. In 2025, we indicated that we expected more modest revenue per connection growth, and our results this quarter remain consistent with that outlook. The chart on the right shows our year-over-year revenue comparison. As a reminder, the markets we divested accounted for $3,000,000 of the revenue decline in the quarter, versus prior year. Additional detail on the recent divestitures is available in the trending schedule on our investor relations website. Slide 13 focuses on the full year and quarterly results. Total operating revenues decreased 1% for the quarter and 2% for the full year. Excluding the impact of divestitures, revenues were flat year over year for both periods. This reflects continued secular declines in our cable and copper markets offset by growth in fiber connections, and modest improvement in revenue per connection. Cash expenses decreased 4% in the quarter, but were up 1% for the full year, reflecting the impact of our transformation efforts in the second half of the year. As a result of lower expenses, adjusted EBITDA improved 6% in the fourth quarter. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA declined 6% primarily due to the impact of divestitures as well as the first quarter's noncash adjustment to stock-based compensation. After a big fourth quarter, full year capital expenditures were $406,000,000 as we prioritized investments in our internal construction crews and equipment to support future builds. On slide 14, we provide our guidance for 2026. We are forecasting total telecom revenues of $1,015,000,000 to $1,055,000,000. This reflects top line growth from our fiber investments, offset by industry-wide declines in video, voice, and wholesale revenues. These ranges also reflect a full year impact from the 2025 divestitures, which contributed $19,000,000 in annual revenues. Adjusted EBITDA is projected to be between $310,000,000 and $350,000,000 in 2026. The 2025 divestitures and legacy revenue stream declines put pressure on this metric, but continued advancement of our fiber program and the benefits from our transformation initiatives will help mitigate these pressures. In 2026, our goal is to deliver 200,000 to 250,000 fiber service addresses, up from what we delivered in 2025, and we expect capital expenditures to be in the range of $550,000,000 to $600,000,000, up from $406,000,000 in 2025. The increased CapEx is driven by A-CAM builds, continued growth in our expansion markets, as well as spending on new edge-out opportunities. Before turning over the call, I want to thank the entire TDS team. Because of your hard work and dedication, we ended the year on a strong footing. We are energized for 2026 and the opportunities ahead. I'll now turn the call over to Anthony. Thanks, Chris, and good morning. As I reflect on what the Array team accomplished in 2025, I am extremely grateful for the team's hard work and perseverance during a year of enormous change and new beginnings. I am honored to have the responsibility to lead Array and look forward to growing the business over the coming years. As set forth on slide 16, Array's business portfolio has three significant yet distinct drivers of value. First, we own a portfolio of more than 4,400 towers across the United States. Originally constructed to support UScellular's wireless network, these sites are primarily located in suburban and rural areas. Notably, about one third of our towers have no competing site within a two-mile radius, making them especially valuable as carriers expand 5G and other advanced technologies to meet increasing mobile data demand. Second, we continue to hold wireless spectrum, principally C-band. This is a valuable asset with an existing ecosystem for deploying 5G that we are opportunistically seeking to monetize. Finally, we have minority interests in a number of primarily wireless partnerships, referred to in our financials as noncontrolling investment interests. These are passive investments that have historically generated substantial income and cash distributions. As I think about our strategic imperatives for 2026 as shown on slide 17, and how we extract value from our business, you will see the same key elements discussed last quarter: a laser focus on fully optimizing our tower operations and monetizing our spectrum. Spectrum. First, a brief update on our spectrum monetization process. As shown on slide 18, we have reached agreements to monetize roughly 70% of our spectrum holdings. As a reminder, in conjunction with the sale of our wireless operations on August 1, we conveyed 30% of our spectrum to T-Mobile. In addition, as previously announced, we signed agreements to sell spectrum to Verizon and AT&T in separate transactions, in exchange for roughly $1,000,000,000 each. In August and October 2025, we signed additional agreements with T-Mobile to sell spectrum for total gross proceeds of $178,000,000. This primarily includes the sale of 700 megahertz A Block, and the exercise of approximately 80% of T-Mobile's call option on the 100 megahertz spectrum. In December 2025, we received regulatory approval for the spectrum sale to AT&T and that transaction closed on 01/13/2026, with the Array board declaring a $10.25 per share dividend that was paid on February 2. Remaining pending spectrum transactions are subject to regulatory approval and closing conditions. Our retained spectrum principally consists of C-band. As I previously noted, we continue to believe this is highly attractive spectrum for 5G with an existing ecosystem that carriers can immediately put to use. While there are build-out requirements for the spectrum, the first one does not apply until 2029, leaving us plenty of time to monetize the spectrum. Turning to slide 21. As noted with our Q3 results, the T-Mobile MLA significantly increases our revenue, and we continue to focus on a strong partnership with T-Mobile to ensure the integration process is well executed. The team has made material progress in Q4, processing over 2,000 applications and completing structural analyses on over 95% of the applications. This is the first key step in the integration process, and we have executed seamlessly and are now shifting focus to subsequent phases of integration. Growing colocation revenue outside of the T-Mobile MLA continues to be a key priority, and both revenue growth and new colocation application volume remains strong. In Q4, cash site rental revenue increased 64% year over year from all customers and increased 8% when excluding the T-Mobile MLA committed sites. When layering in the T-Mobile interim site revenue, the increase was 96% year over year. We also continue to see a strong pipeline, with full year 2025 new colocation applications, excluding the T-Mobile MLA, exceeding prior year by 47%. Like others in the industry, we disclosed in Q3 that we received a letter dated September 2025 from DISH Wireless whereby DISH asserts its master lease agreement with Array has been impacted by unforeseeable actions of the FCC and therefore DISH believes it is relieved of its obligations under the MLA, and despite this, DISH plans to continue to operate certain sites for a period of time. Array continues to believe that DISH's assertions are without merit and DISH's obligations under the MLA remain intact. Since early December, DISH has generally failed to make contractually required payments. Array will take such actions it deems necessary to protect its rights under the MLA. For full year 2025, Array recognized approximately $7,000,000 of site rental revenue from the DISH MLA, and DISH has obligations at similar levels from 2026 through 2031, with a declining revenue commitment in 2032 through 2035. Slide 22 summarizes Array's financial results. Q4 was the first full quarter of T-Mobile MLA revenue, both the revenue from the MLA minimum committed sites as well as the full population of interim sites. The aforementioned T-Mobile integration volume in Q4 drove elevated service revenues as well as higher cost of operations expense due to the high volume of structural analyses conducted in Q4. Additionally, in Q4, there was a prospective change in classification of property tax and insurance from SG&A to cost of operations. SG&A expenses in the 2025 include cost to support the wind down of the legacy wireless operations. We began to see reductions in these costs. We continue to expect these expenses to persist into 2026 but declining over future periods. Turning to slide 24. As a reminder, T-Mobile has until January 2028 to finalize its select of 2,015 committed sites under the new MLA. Once these selections have been made, in addition to any incremental sites above the MLA commitment, Array expects to have between 800 to 1,800 tenant or naked towers. As laid out in our strategic imperatives, we are hyper focused on ground lease optimization and, more specifically, reducing the cash burden of our negative cash flow towers. Those efforts are coupled with our sales team continuing to aggressively market our full portfolio of towers, which will aid in reducing the naked tower portfolio. We are also assessing the future leasability of these towers and will prudently evaluate all outcomes and options over a multiyear period as we determine a path forward for the naked tower portfolio. Slide 25 summarizes the results of our partnership, our noncontrolling investment interests. This investment income and distributions are primarily from four wireless entities, operated and managed by AT&T and Verizon. As discussed last quarter, investment income and distributions for full year 2025 were impacted by several onetime factors, including the impact of the Iowa partnership selling their wireless operations to T-Mobile, and distributions received from Verizon related to their transaction with Vertical Bridge. Shifting our focus to 2026, on slide 26, we provided guidance for Array Digital Infrastructure, Inc. for the following metrics: total operating revenue, adjusted EBITDA and OIBDA, and capital expenditures. Notably, our guidance ranges are wider than the industry norm, but there are a few key factors driving dynamic for 2026. First, there is uncertainty with the T-Mobile MLA and timing of interim site terminations, as well as the potential for incremental committed sites above the MLA minimum. And second, on the expense side, we have discussed the currently elevated SG&A expenses and the wind down of these expenses that we expect throughout 2026 and beyond. For total operating revenue, we are forecasting a range from $200,000,000 to $215,000,000. This reflects a range of outcomes related to the T-Mobile MLA as uncertainty and includes anticipated new colocation and amendment revenue driven from applications we received in 2025 and expect to receive in early 2026. Our guidance range does not include DISH revenues given the uncertainty related to their recent actions. For adjusted EBITDA, we are forecasting a range from $100,000,000 to $215,000,000. Given the passive nature of our noncontrolling investment interests, our guidance range assumes equity income similar to 2025, excluding the onetime events outlined on slide 25. Adjusted OIBDA guidance of $50,000,000 to $65,000,000 simply removes the equity method investments. Finally, for capital expenditures, we are forecasting $25,000,000 to $35,000,000. This range is largely driven by a degree of uncertainty around ground lease purchase volume. Our CapEx spending in 2026 will continue to include onetime tower light monitoring migration costs of about $6,000,000, as we complete our efforts to migrate tower light monitoring to our long-term solution. In closing, I want to again thank the entire Array and TDS teams who have dedicated countless hours and energy to the stand up of our tower company. Array's future is bright, and 2025 was a transformative year. I am excited about the opportunity to lead this team through a year of integration, growth, and a focus on operational efficiency. Thank you, Anthony. I will now turn the call back to Walter. As you can see, TDS is in the midst of a vital period of transformative change. The successful close of the T-Mobile and AT&T transactions have unlocked tremendous value, enabling us to expand and deepen our fiber program