Thank you, Sharon, and good morning, everyone. I will discuss the quarterly results and then share more about our updated full year outlook. This was the most profitable first quarter in the company’s history. We grew across all segments, expanded the gross profit margin, and increased pre-tax income to a new record. This reflects the work from our strategic initiatives over the past several years and the business operating at a higher level of profitability. We also continue to return capital to shareholders. We returned $7.1 million for the quarter through dividends and share repurchases, and have $85 million remaining on the board approved authorization. Moving to a more detailed review of our first quarter results. Total revenues were $128.4 million, an increase of 11.9%. Net retail sales were $119.6 million, an increase of 10.9%. Stores delivered strong performance. All four levers were positive: traffic; conversion; average unit retail; and units per transaction. Our domestic store traffic was up 3%, significantly outpacing the U.S. national traffic, which declined by 3%. E-commerce demand increased 0.5%. Commercial revenue, which primarily represents wholesale sales to our partner operators and continues to be the fastest growing segment of our business, and when including international franchise revenue, rose a combined 28.3%. Gross margin was 56.8%, an improvement of 260 basis points compared to last year, benefiting from both retail and commercial segments. The leverage from improved merchandise margin, primarily driven by lower discounts, as well as occupancy costs drove retail gross margin expansion. SG&A expenses were $53.7 million or 41.7% of total revenues compared to 41.5% last year. Higher store-level wage rates, healthcare costs, and general inflationary pressures contributed to the 20 basis point increase. Our pre-tax income for the first quarter record of $19.6 million, representing growth of 30.6% year-over-year and 15.3% of total revenues. EPS was $1.17, also a first quarter record, and an increase of 42.7%, reflecting higher pre-tax income, a reduced share count, and lower tax rate. Turning to the balance sheet. At the first quarter end, our cash balance was $44.3 million, representing a $6.1 million or 16% increase year-over-year. This was after returning $37 million to shareholders over the past 12 months. Inventory at quarter end was $72.3 million, an increase of $8.3 million, much of which is related to an accelerated purchase of core products and in line with our expectations, as well as nearly $2 million of tariff costs. The company remains comfortable with the level and composition of its inventory. Turning to the outlook. Following a strong first quarter and solid start to the second quarter, we have maintained our revenue guidance and we continue to expect the addition of at least 50 net new experience locations, most of which will be operated by our international partners. We continue to expect our commercial segment revenue to grow at least 20% for the year. Also, we are updating our pre-tax income guidance to a range of $61 million to $67 million, inclusive of the current tariff rates. Let me add some more commentary on tariffs as they relate to Build-A-Bear. First, our global footprint has created an organic hedge as tariffs will not directly affect most of our international stores, whether corporate, partner-operated, or franchise. Second, please note that our retail cost of goods sold not only includes merchandise costs, but also rent, warehousing, and distribution expenses. However, the merchandise portion is the only cost directly impacted. Third, over the past several years, Build-A-Bear has significantly reduced its reliance on China as a primary source of goods, with most products now being sourced from Vietnam. Additionally, while not all products are dual-sourced, many are, and we have already exercised our ability to redirect China-sourced products to our international locations. Fourth, Build-A-Bear is a meaningful vertical retailer with a unique business model. The company’s core product offerings are less seasonally dependent, with these choices representing over half of our sales. This enables more direct latitude over diversifying sourcing, inventory timing and flow, setting retail values, and managing promotional strategy, compared to traditional importers. Considering those factors, we now expect the tariffs and associated cost impact on our fiscal 2025 P&L net of mitigation to be less than $10 million. Also, our pre-tax guidance continues to reflect approximately $5 million of additional medical and labor costs, which we mentioned on our last call. Given our previous inventory pull forward and current mix, we anticipate tariffs will have a relatively modest impact on our second quarter results with an expectation of a greater effect starting in the third quarter. In closing, we are pleased with our strong first quarter performance. Looking forward, our objective is to stay focused on our strategy to grow the number of global locations, continue our digital transformation, and invest in our company to drive another year of record revenues and deliver solid pre-tax income margins, while returning capital to shareholders. I want to thank all our store and warehouse associates, corporate team members, and partners for contributing to record first quarter results. Finally, we look forward to sharing our progress as we move through the year and speaking with many of you at upcoming investor conferences, as mentioned in our press release this morning, including the New York Stock Exchange Virtual Investor Access Day on June 5th. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now turn the call back over to the operator for questions. Operator?