Thanks, Jordan, and good afternoon, everyone. We really appreciate you joining us today. Before I get started, I want to say how pleased we are to have Jim with us at Cable One and joining us for today's call, and I'm honored to introduce him to our stakeholders who may not yet know him. I'll begin by covering a few takeaways from our fourth quarter and full year results, then spend some time highlighting the key initiatives we are prioritizing as we look ahead and continue to build upon the transformation we've embarked on over the last couple of years. After my remarks, I'll turn it over to Jim to share his initial thoughts on the business and the operating environment, and then Jordan will walk us through the more detailed financials. Let's jump in. During the fourth quarter, residential broadband connect activity showed year-over-year growth, while disconnects improved significantly compared to the previous quarter. As a result, net subscriber results in the fourth quarter improved relative to the declining trends we experienced earlier in 2025, though net subscriber figures remained negative. We continue to operate in a challenging macro environment with competitive pressure from fixed wireless and fiber overbuilds. Against that backdrop, our focus over the last 2 years has been on equipping the business to operate in a more competitive landscape by transforming our leadership, modernizing our growth enablement platforms and redefining go-to-market playbooks. With a considerable amount of the foundational work largely behind us, our focus is on defending our existing customer base, capitalizing on profitable growth opportunities and executing on key efficiency initiatives. I'll first review residential broadband customer trends. Residential data customers declined by approximately 10,700 in the fourth quarter. Gross connect activity improved sequentially through the first 3 quarters of 2025 and meaningfully year-over-year in the fourth quarter, while disconnects improved significantly in Q4 versus the third quarter. As a result, the fourth quarter represented a step forward relative to the declining trends of the first 3 quarters of the year. While this reflects progress, it is by no means a standard we view as acceptable. The team is highly aligned and focused on driving continued improvement. A key driver of this improvement has been the continued refinement of our go-to-market approach, enabled by the completion of our billing platform transformation. We have introduced new products, pricing and offers to better serve value-conscious customers. We're also enhancing the experience for all customers through complementary services that support the in-home customer experience, including premium Wi-Fi powered by Wi-Fi 7, enhanced online security and holistic technical support for anything in the home our network is enabling. As of the end of the year, over 1/3 of our residential broadband customers were benefiting from the advanced in-home capabilities and experience delivered by our partnership with Ero, representing growth of more than 30% year-over-year. Sell-in adoption for this service exceeded 80% during the quarter as customers continue to recognize the experience enhancements we've invested in, and we mutually benefit from the improved customer satisfaction and reduced churn. Simplified pricing and clear product structures are enabling our Sparklight teams to more effectively match customers with the right offerings, deliver a more consistent customer experience across our footprint and stay competitive. At the same time, churn reduction remains a key area of focus. Competitive pressure and customer sensitivity around promotional roll-offs continue to influence customer behavior, particularly in a heightened value-conscious environment. That said, we saw meaningful improvement in disconnects during the fourth quarter, and we're applying both discipline and urgency to retention improvement measures. Turning to ARPU. Results this quarter were consistent with our expectations and in line with the stability we discussed last quarter, which was remaining within $1 of our second quarter ARPU level. As we've noted previously, some of our go-to-market customer acquisition and retention initiatives will put downward pressure on ARPU. We expect that pressure to be partially offset by continued adoption of value-enhancing products and services, including higher speed tiers, premium Wi-Fi, eero Plus, Tech Assist, our AutoPay program and other offerings that improve the customer experience. Shifting to competition, I'll start with fixed wireless, which is now essentially ubiquitous across our footprint with multiple providers. Our perspective here remains consistent. Our fiber-based wired network delivers greater reliability, higher speeds, lower latency and substantial scalable capacity for our broadband customers who continue to demonstrate growing demand for our services. In addition, our network's excess capacity allows us to offer value-conscious packages to new customers while still protecting our accretive unit economics. Utilization trends continue to demonstrate that our network is well suited to meet growing consumer demand. In the fourth quarter, average monthly data usage reached approximately 835 gigabits per customer, a new high with more than 30% of customers exceeding 1 terabyte per month. Despite this growth, peak hour downstream and upstream utilization remained at or below 20%, demonstrating that network capacity remains well ahead of demand and will not be a barrier to growth. Moving on to wired competition. Nearly 60% of our passings now face gig-capable wired broadband competition. Of that 60%, just over 50% reflects fiber-to-the-home, largely from incumbent telco providers, while approximately 10% represents markets where we are the fiber-to-the-home provider competing against an upgraded gig-capable MSO. In approximately 15% of our passings, we compete against 2 other gig-capable wired broadband providers. We are aware of the broader industry consolidation occurring across the broadband landscape. Following Verizon's acquisition of Frontier, our overlap with Frontier remains less than 10% of our footprint and a meaningful portion of that overlap has already been upgraded to fiber over the past several years. Similarly, AT&T's acquisition of Lumen's Mass Markets fiber business has minimal direct overlap with our smaller towns and communities and only a small contingent of passings in our markets were included in that transaction to our knowledge. Looking ahead, we expect many markets to settle into a structure with 2 wired multi-gig broadband providers alongside wireless options, both fixed and mobile-only as well as satellite adoption on the rural edge. Over time, we anticipate seeing an environment in which roughly 80% of households are served by wired providers with the remaining 20% served by wireless or satellite solutions. Relative to our current penetration, that structure provides a continued opportunity to grow share over the long term and generate attractive shareholder returns. We continue to make progress on our mobile initiative, moving from the concept to live pilot over the last several months. Importantly, we view this as a complementary product that strengthens our overall value proposition, increases customer lifetime value and supports both retention and acquisition within residential broadband. During the fourth quarter, we launched a mobile pilot in 6 markets, and the service is live today with a small number of customers. Our focus has been on operational readiness, ensuring provisioning, billing, customer care and field processes are fully integrated before scaling more broadly. Early feedback has been constructive, and the team is preparing for a broader launch across the footprint expected in late Q1. With the pilot complete and the necessary platforms in place, we are positioned to scale mobile in a disciplined and financially responsible manner. Turning to Business Services. We continue to broaden our commercial reach and sharpen our sales execution. During the quarter, we launched a broker and agent sales channel, expanding our go-to-market efforts into underpenetrated customer segments. Early engagement has been encouraging, and we believe this channel can drive incremental revenue and deepen our presence in targeted commercial verticals over time. Performance in our carrier, wholesale and enterprise segments strengthened. Average monthly installs during the final 3 months of 2025 increased compared to the prior year period, reflecting improved execution and growing demand across these solutions. In markets where network density and responsiveness matter most, our dark fiber and direct Internet access offerings remain strong differentiators. We're also pleased to welcome Ed Butler as Senior Vice President of Business Services effective January 2. Ed joins Cable One from Mega Broadband, one of our long-standing investments where he most recently served as Chief Commercial Officer. Under Ed's leadership, we plan to accelerate new product launches designed to expand wallet share within our existing customer base while strengthening our value proposition to acquire new customers. This proven sales leadership will play an important role in advancing our business services strategy. Turning to MBI and integration planning. As we've disclosed, the put option has been exercised, and we expect the transaction to close in October. Given that timing, we've been deliberate about using the lead time we have today to plan thoughtfully with a target towards core integration in under a year from close. MBI serves rural America with a reliable high-speed network in geographies that are complementary to our existing footprint and their local first operating model is closely aligned with our own philosophy. That strategic and cultural alignment gives us confidence in the combination ahead. To support that, we've emphasized early planning, tight prioritization and an agile approach that allows teams to move quickly once the transaction closes. We continue to believe MBI is a strong fit for our company and expect cost and tax efficiencies over time, and we believe the preparation underway today positions us well to deliver on those expectations. To close, we have made changes in growth enablement investments that better position us to execute in this competitive operating environment as we pursue the opportunities ahead. High-speed connectivity is a critical service. Demand continues to grow, and we operate a highly capable wired network with substantial available capacity. Across much of our footprint, broadband penetration remains in the low 30% range, indicating we're still under-indexed relative to what we believe is achievable over the long term. We don't inherit customers. We have to earn them. That requires a relentless focus on delivering value, experience and reliability every day. The combination of our network, our product suite and our outstanding associates, supported by our local neighborly operating model positions us to compete effectively in our markets. The work over the past several years, modernizing systems, refining go-to-market strategies and investing in our people has built a solid foundation. With that foundation in place, our focus is clear: defend our base, grow where we see opportunity and operate with discipline. We remain confident in our long-term outlook and excited about the path ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to Jim to share his thoughts on the business.