Thank you, Dennis. Let's begin on Slide 7 with a review of our financial performance. Total revenue of $2.1 billion declined 5.4% year-over-year. Video cord cutter remains the primary driver of year-over-year revenue declines, representing nearly 6% of total declines with residential video revenues down close to 10%. News and Advertising revenues declined 10%, driven by the benefits in the prior year period from incremental political ad revenue. Excluding political, News and Advertising revenue grew by almost 9%. Over the full year, we expect to offset most of the revenue pressures through continued improvement in programming and direct costs as we manage expenses in line with the lower revenue environment. Residential ARPU declined 1.8% year-over-year to $133.28, lower by $2.48, primarily driven by the impacts from video. In the third quarter, video contributed to a $3.16 decline year-over-year to total residential ARPU. This is related to volume, partially offset by disciplined video price expansion and representing nearly 130% of total ARPU decline. Offsetting those declines, we saw steady improvement in all other service revenue, contributing to a $0.68 year-over-year improvement driven in part by rate discipline and growth of mobile and new product sell-in. This underscores that even with improving margins, video's revenue pressure remains the biggest factor weighing on top line and ARPU performance. Broadband ARPU declined slightly year-over-year to $74.65, tied mainly to seasonal trends with expected low promotional roll-off volumes. We expect full year broadband ARPU to be slightly up year-over-year, supported by additional rate benefits in the fourth quarter. Continuing on Slide 8, our gross margin reached an all-time high of 69.7%. Gross margin expanded by 160 basis points year-over-year reflecting the continued mix shift away from video, along with a disciplined approach to stronger programming agreements and ongoing efforts to optimize video margins. Adjusted EBITDA of $831 million declined 3.6% year-over-year. This represents a moderation in the rate of decline compared with recent quarters, reflecting the benefits of ongoing operational efficiencies and disciplined cost management, as evidenced by the 3.3% sequential improvement in adjusted EBITDA in Q3 compared to the second quarter. Third quarter adjusted EBITDA margin expanded by 70 basis points year-over-year to 39.4%, representing our highest EBITDA margin in the past 2 years, and underscores the continued progress in improving efficiency. In the fourth quarter, we are targeting year-over-year growth in adjusted EBITDA, which will represent the first quarter of growth in 16 quarters. The expected step-up in adjusted EBITDA is driven by both improvements in top line trends and our cost profile. On revenue, we see a path of slowing the rate of decline in our core residential and B2B businesses. Our strategy focuses on more disciplined ARPU management through a seasonal timing of rate actions and continued expansion of value-added services. For the full year, we expect broadband ARPU to increase slightly year-over-year, supported by anticipated growth in the fourth quarter. As expected, third quarter results were impacted by typical seasonal dynamics, including back-to-school and lower promotional roll volumes. As noted, Video continues to be the largest driver of our revenue declines. However, we have successfully slowed the rate of decline by adding incremental subscribers to our new video tiers, and we expect this trend to continue. Additionally, our Lightpath business continues to gain share in the hyperscaler market. As we exited 2024, we announced more than $100 million in awarded contracts. And since then, we've meaningfully increased both the total value of awarded deals and opportunities in the pipeline. We expect these contracts to begin contributing to revenue in the fourth quarter with continued growth through 2026 and beyond. In News and Advertising, while we continue to face year-over-year headwinds from the prior year political cycle, we expect to see acceleration in our advanced advertising platform driven by seasonal contracts, primarily tied to the NFL season in the fourth quarter. Additionally, we anticipate some political advertising benefits this year from races in New York City and New Jersey. On direct costs, our teams have done a great job at resetting and executing innovative programming agreements which contributed to a 14% reduction in programming costs year-to-date. We expect this momentum to continue, supporting our full year outlook on direct costs of approximately $2.6 billion. And finally, on operating expenses, we continue to expect benefits from our workforce optimization efforts. These actions were taken without impacting our customer-facing teams, ensuring no compromise to the quality of our customer experience. In addition, we see continued reductions in call volumes and truck rolls tied to the strength of our network in AI-driven automation yielding up savings. And last, as we said previously, we expect moderation in consulting and professional fees tied to our transformation efforts. All of these opportunities from incremental revenue to lower cost profile give us confidence in the path to achieving approximately $3.4 billion of adjusted EBITDA in the full year. Next, turning to Slide 9. I'd like to go a bit deeper regarding our operational efficiency momentum. In the third quarter, our operating expenses improved 2.4% or approximately $16 million lower year-over-year, marking the first quarter of year-over-year OpEx improvement in 6 quarters. As we discussed in August, we delivered OpEx moderation, staying on track to achieve a 4% to 6% reduction in full year 2026 operating expenses compared to full year 2024. Historical OpEx elevation was driven by incremental investments on our transformation journey to refine processes and implement new tools, some of which have now begun to taper, portion of transformation-related costs remain in our operating expenses today but are expected to further decline in Q4 and into 2026. In addition, we reduced sales and marketing expenses in the third quarter, reflecting our disciplined approach to managing subscriber acquisition costs and avoiding overspending on lower-value customers. Salaries and related costs are running below the prior trajectory driven by workforce optimization actions taken in the second quarter with the full benefit expected in the fourth quarter. Although this is partially offset by employee-related health and wellness costs, which continue to run at a higher rate than 2025. Specifically, health and wellness costs were higher by $8 million year-over-year in the third quarter and higher by $30 million year-over-year in the third quarter year-to-date. Beyond OpEx, we continue to drive efficiency across our operations. First, annualized service call rate improved by approximately 6% and the annualized service visit rate improved by approximately 20% year-over-year in the third quarter. Next, we continue to focus on strengthening our programming agreements and take a data-driven analytical approach to these negotiations, ensuring our content strategy aligns with customer preferences and viewing behaviors. This approach, combined with continued adoption of our new video tiers, supported video gross margin of expansion of almost 350 basis points year-over-year in the third quarter. We continue to integrate AI tools across multiple areas of the business from predicting outages to coaching sales reps. AI is helping drive efficiency and supporting growth opportunities. For example, we launched our AI virtual assistance in sales and build partnerships with companies like Google and Cresta to transform customer support. So far, the results have been fewer customer touch points, faster resolutions and better experiences. And finally, our customer satisfaction continues to improve with the relationship NPS up 6 points in the last year and up 17 points over the past 3 years, reflecting ongoing enhancements to network performance and overall customer experience. Stepping back, these overarching trends reflect the progress we've made and laying a foundation of quality across our products, network and services. The discipline and efficiencies we built into the operations are now beginning to be reflected in our results as we position the business for sustained improvement. Next, on Slide 10, I'll review our network investment and capital expenditures. We now project full year 2025 capital expenditures of approximately $1.3 billion compared to our prior outlook of approximately $1.2 billion. The increase reflects incremental investment at Lightpath to support continued hyperscaler build activity, which is now expected to be at the higher end of the Lightpath capital range of $200 million to $250 million. In addition, there are some timing impacts towards the end of the year that are contributing to our higher 2025 capital outlook. Cash capital expenditures in the third quarter were $326 million, down 9.4% year-over-year. This reflects lower capital spend in the second half of the year as more capital-intensive phases of our build activity occurred earlier in the year, and capital has tapered substantially each quarter since. In the third quarter, we added 51,000 total passings and 30,000 fiber passings. Year-to-date, we've added 112,000 total new passings and continue to target 175,000 total new passings in the full year. As we discussed in previous calls, the majority of our passing growth in 2025 is expected to come from new fiber deployments. In addition, we are efficiently upgrading portions of our HFC network to enable multi-gig speeds. We continue to deploy mid split upgrades at a low cost per passing and expect to begin marketing multi-gig HFC service in our first market later this month. And finally, turning to Slide 11, we will review our debt maturity profile. As discussed in August, we are pleased to have partnered with Goldman Sachs and TPG Angelo Gordon on a $1 billion asset-backed receivable facility loan. This first of its kind securitization transaction backed primarily by HFC assets has added additional debt capacity. The loan transaction was completed in July of 2025 and is included in our consolidated debt maturity profile and debt calculations presented. At the end of the third quarter, our weighted average cost of debt is 6.9%, our weighted average life of debt is 3.4 years, and 73% of our total debt stack is fixed. Consolidated liquidity is approximately $1.2 billion and our leverage ratio is 7.8x the last 2 quarters annualized adjusted EBITDA. Before we close, I'm pleased to share that earlier today, we announced the alignment of our corporate identity with Optimum, a brand trusted by millions of customers. Effective tomorrow, November 7, we expect to change our corporate name from Altice USA to Optimum Communications. In connection with this, starting on November 19, our Class A common stock, which currently trades under ATUS ticker symbol on the New York Stock Exchange is expected to begin trading under our new OPTU ticker. We view this transition as an important milestone in our multiyear transformation journey, uniting us under a single Optimum brand identity. In closing, we believe our strategy and unwavering discipline and focus enables us to build a more resilient business over time, positioned for sustainable, long-term growth and enhanced value for our shareholders. With that, we will now take questions.