Thanks Carl and good afternoon, everyone. Let me begin by adding to what Carl just said, we remain confident in the long-term opportunity for Beachbody and we continue to see significant levels to deliver profitable growth as we unlock the power of our assets, capitalize on our unique position in the marketplace, and build upon our two plus decades of fitness leadership. Now, turning for Q1 results, our total revenue was $198.9 million and although these results were lower than q1 of last year, they were ahead of our guidance, reflecting the strong momentum driven by innovative launches. We started with our new fitness program Job One in December, and followed by the impressive rollout of 4 Week Gut Protocol on March the 15th. Our digital revenue was at $1.7 million, which was a 14% decline from prior year. And two-thirds of the decline was due to a reclassification of business service fees from preferred customers out of digital and into Nutrition and other revenue. So, adjusting for this geographic shift, our digital revenue would have only declined by 5%. Digital subscriptions decreased year-over-year against a challenging 41% comp increase from the first quarter of 2021. However, compared to the first quarter of 2019, our digital subscriptions increased 48%, reflecting solid adoption digital fitness compared to our pre-pandemic baseline. Engagement or [indiscernible] was down versus prior year, but increased 200 basis points compared to 2019. Quarterly retention levels remained solid throughout both last year and Q1 of 2019, demonstrating our consistency in retaining subscribers through continued content innovation. Our Connected Fitness revenue was $19.5 million, with 16,600 bikes delivered compared to 11,900 bikes delivered in the first quarter of 2021 on a pre-merger basis. Importantly, engagement in the first quarter was higher amongst digital subscribers who own a bike versus subscribers who don't own a bike. And taken together, this demonstrates that our value proposition is resonating with our subscriber base, which further enhances LTV. And Nutrition another revenue was $97.7 million, down 25% compared to the first quarter of 2021. Historically, fitness innovation and digital acquisitions have been key drivers for our Nutrition business, along with new product launches that serve multiple needs states. Given the early positive reads from recent launches and a robust pipeline of additional new releases set to launch throughout the year, we're confident that our Nutrition portfolio will return to growth over time. Now, turning the gross margin, our gross profit was $93 million or 47% of revenue in the first quarter versus 70% last year. Over 80% of the year-over-year reduction was related to the negative margin in Connected Fitness. The remaining 20% was due to higher content production costs and additional COVID-related supply chain surcharges. Now, over time, we expect to improve the margin on Connected Fitness sales as well as enhanced total LTV and we'll do so as we capture more attentive high-margin subscription revenue and increase the cross sell of nutritional products with targeted upsells made directly on the bikes' touchscreen, which are due to launch in Q2 of this year. Our Connected Fitness gross profit was negative $25.2 million and was impacted by three key drivers. Firstly, we incurred a $14.9 million NRB charge. This is a non-cash charge applied to our quarter end bike inventory and open PO balance in accordance with GAAP is added back to net income in our calculation of adjusted EBITDA. Secondly, our margin was impacted by lower ARV as the operating environment remain highly competitive. And the third driver were highest shipping and freight costs, which he leveraged our Connected Fitness gross profit. Our digital gross margin was 79.9%, declined by 840 basis points versus 2021, primarily due to higher content production costs. And these costs predominantly related to the launch of BOD Interactive and the Mixed Content Library, which were acquired last year as part of the merger, as those costs are now being amortized within digital cost of revenue. Our Nutrition and other gross margin was 54.2%, which were the 230 basis point decline from 2021. The change in margin was evenly split between additional supply chain surcharges and a change in our product mix. Now, turning to operating expenses. Our total operating expenses decreased approximately $22 million, or 12% year-over-year to $167.4 million. This change can be seen in four line items in the P&L. In selling and marketing, you'll notice a lower, but extremely targeted acquisition expense, focused only on the highest return lowest risk opportunities. Net reduction in selling and marketing expenses were partially offset by an increase in technology and development costs to support new program releases that drive customer acquisition, engagement and retention, as well as higher G&A to the public company related accounting legal and insurance costs, and the addition of a restructuring line totaling $7.2 million from our strategic realignment to One Brand. Finally, our first quarter adjusted EBIT loss was $19.1 million, and our net loss was $73.5 million or negative $0.24 per basic and diluted share. Now, turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with an unrestricted cash balance of $6. 4 million and no debt. And the change in cash since the end of Q4 reflects the timing of working capital outflows and is not indicative of an ongoing quarterly cash burn rate. Specifically, the first quarter also represented the peak of inventory purchases and technology investments for 2022 capital projects, which we expect to significantly decline over the remainder of the year. And given our increased efforts to control costs and preserve cash, we remain confident that we can continue to manage the business from cash flow from operations. Now, I'd like to move to outlook. As we look forward, our emphasis will remain on profit maximization and cash flow generation. For the second quarter of 2022, we're guiding total GAAP revenue of between $175 million to $185 million, which reflects the return to more historical seasonality trends, the impact of lower digital subscriptions versus prior year as we exited Q1, and the timing of new product launches. Additionally, in terms of EBITDA guidance, we expect an adjusted EBITDA loss of between $7 million to $12 million in Q2 as we benefit from cost savings from the One Brand strategy and other organizational efficiency initiatives that we deployed in the first quarter. For the full year, we expect to realize a combined adjusted EBITDA the improvement and CapEx reduction of approximately $120 million versus last year. This a $10 million more than we previously guided, as we continue to identify opportunities across the organization to drive efficiencies and reduce costs regarding our full year 2022 outlook. While we're not issuing specific guidance, I'd like to provide some directional color. We expect total revenue to be slightly weighted to the back half of 2022 and our third quarter revenue to be higher than our fourth quarter revenue in line with historical seasonality, and the cadence of our fitness and Nutrition launches, which drive our revenue flywheel. Also, while we expect to deliver a significantly lower full year adjusted EBITDA loss versus 2021, we're not forecasting linear improvements quarter-to-quarter. However, overall, we expect our adjusted EBITDA loss in the back half of the year to be materially lower than the first half of the year. Now, before turning it back to Carl, I'd like to take a moment to say what a privilege has been to serve as President and CFO for the past seven and a half years and work alongside so many talented, dedicated, and passionate individuals of Beachbody. I couldn't be prouder of what we've accomplished together as I hand over the reins to Marc Suidan. Marc has a really strong background, especially in technology transformations, and every competence in the team's capabilities and the growth ahead for Beachbody. So with that, I'll turn it back to Carl.