Brian C. Witherow
Thanks, Richard. I'll begin with the balance sheet and a recap of use of cash this quarter. In late June, we closed a $500 million fungible add-on to our term loan. We used the net proceeds to pay off $200 million of 2025 notes while using the balance to repay a portion of our outstanding revolver borrowings. Following this transaction, we have no debt maturing until 2027 when the buyout of the noncontrolling interest of our Georgia Park is due in January and $1 billion of bonds come due in April. We intend to address these maturities in the coming months before they go current next year. Despite the headwinds to start the year, our underlying business remains solid. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter fell well below plan. And nevertheless, we have ample liquidity with no near-term covenant or cash concerns. We ended the quarter with approximately $107 million in cash and cash equivalents and total liquidity of $540 million, including cash on hand and available capacity under our revolving credit facility. During the 3-month period, capital expenditures totaled $168 million, consistent with our previously disclosed expectation to spend $475 million to $500 million for the full year in 2025. During the quarter, we used $122 million on cash interest payments and $10 million in cash taxes. Based on outstanding debt, including forecasted borrowings on our revolver, we expect full year cash interest payments will total approximately $320 million. We now expect 2025 full year cash taxes will total approximately $40 million, reflecting the impact of further tax planning efforts by our team as well as the benefit of bonus depreciation deductions provided under new tax regulations. We are working to identify more cost efficiencies within our future capital programs and are now projecting a total CapEx spend of approximately $400 million for 2026. Cash interest payments next year are projected to total between $320 million and $330 million and cash tax payments in 2026 are projected to be in the $45 million to $50 million range. Touching on leverage. Accounting for our recent refinancing transaction and revolver borrowings, gross debt outstanding at the end of the second quarter was approximately $5.3 billion and net debt to annualized second quarter adjusted EBITDA was approximately 6.2x, which is above our target range of sub-4x. Our priority remains reducing leverage back inside of 4x as quickly as possible, which we remain confident can be accomplished through the combination of organic growth in the business and the selective divestiture of noncore assets. As we shared last quarter, we are actively pursuing 2 opportunities, including the monetization of excess land near Kings Dominion in Richmond, Virginia and the sale of land at Six Flags America in Bowie, Maryland, a park we are sunsetting after the 2025 season. We are aggressively working on the steps necessary to close each transaction as quickly as possible, and we will provide further updates as things develop. We are also actively evaluating other opportunities where similar value creation is possible. Now turning to second quarter results. Given we operate in the outdoor entertainment space, we prefer not to use weather as an excuse for soft performance, but rather acknowledge that it's an uncontrollable we need to navigate through. It's clear, however, that extreme weather across much of our North American portfolio had a meaningful impact on early season operations, particularly over the last 6 weeks of the second quarter. Over that 6-week period, combined attendance was down 12% from the same time frame last year as severe storms, excessive rain and extreme heat disrupted visitation and sales of season passes during the most critical portion of the sales cycle. By comparison, combined attendance over the first 7 weeks of the quarter when weather was not an issue, was flat compared to the prior year. Overall, close to 20% of our operating days in the second quarter were impacted by weather, including 49 days in which parks were forced to close entirely. By comparison, we were only forced to close parks on 12 days due to inclement weather during the second quarter of 2024. Despite the headwinds around attendance when weather wasn't an issue, demand was solid. And when guests visited, they continue to show a desire and willingness to spend on quality items and unique experiences. This was particularly the case at some of our largest and more well-established properties. At the legacy Cedar Fair parks, admissions per capita spending was up 4% during the quarter, reflecting a 2% to 3% increase in season pass pricing and a 3% to 4% increase in single-day ticket pricing. The cost value proposition at those parks is very high, giving us clear line of sight to responsibly take pricing with demand. Meanwhile, per capita spending on in-park products at the legacy Cedar Fair parks was up 3% in the quarter, driven by higher guest spending on food and beverage, extra charge products and merchandise. Each of these positive trends underscores our belief that our consumer remains engaged and interested in the entertainment our parks offer. On the cost front, we continue to focus on realizing synergies across the portfolio while understanding that it's critical to reinvest in our underperforming parks to improve guest satisfaction scores and increase penetration rates over the long term. At the legacy Cedar Fair parks, we realized a 1% reduction in operating expenses on an adjusted EBITDA basis. The decrease was primarily driven by lower maintenance costs and a reduction in seasonal labor hours during the quarter. Much of these cost savings were reinvested at the legacy Six Flags parks as we work to enhance the guest experience and improve the value proposition of those parks. During the quarter, we incurred $11 million of nonrecurring merger-related integration costs and another $28 million of adjusted EBITDA add-backs comprised primarily of $24 million of severance payments related to our recent org restructuring initiative and $4 million of public liability settlements. Outside of these costs, cash operating expenses in the period were driven higher by 2 primary factors: first, a shift of approximately $19 million in advertising originally budgeted for the second half of the year. As Richard noted, this was a real-time strategic decision made to combat attendance pressures we are seeing and to stimulate demand for season passes and single-day tickets heading into the peak summer season. And second, a pull forward into the second quarter of approximately $6 million of preopening maintenance investments at several of our underpenetrated parks, a strategic initiative to ensure rides were licensed and ready to operate on opening day. These decisions resulted in an estimated expense timing difference in the quarter of approximately $25 million, which we would expect to fully reverse over the balance of the year. While we pulled forward spending on maintenance and marketing and reinvested cost savings, we still expect to reduce our full year operating costs and expenses, excluding adjusted EBITDA add-backs by 3%. Our cost-saving efforts are always aligned with our business, which is back half weighted, meaning the opportunities for reducing costs are the greatest and least disruptive to the business during the third and fourth quarters. Before I turn things back over to Richard, let me provide some more color around our recent performance trends and our updated outlook for the full year. Over the past 4 weeks, attendance is up more than 300,000 visits or 4% over the same 4-week period last year, and demand trends are accelerating. We are particularly pleased with the improved results considering the ongoing attendance headwind that a smaller active pass base represents. For the full 5 weeks of July, attendance was up 1% and preliminary net revenues were down approximately 3%, reflecting the pressure on guest spending due to attendance mix and the impact of recent promotional offerings in the market. At the legacy company level, attendance in July at our Cedar Fair parks was up 3% or more than 180,000 visits and preliminary revenues were up 2% or approximately 7% -- or $7 million, demonstrating the strong consumer appeal of our more established properties. Meanwhile, demand trends at our legacy Six Flags parks improved significantly from the second quarter, but remained down 1% or approximately 54,000 visits for the month. At the individual park level, we're seeing returns on the initiatives we've implemented and the investments we've made. The recent improvement in attendance has been led by the performance of our 15 largest properties where our capital programs were concentrated this year. Combined attendance at those 15 locations was up 5% over the past 4 weeks, underscoring our belief that the second quarter headwinds were transient and not reflective of a fundamental change in the business. Case in point, recent demand trends at Cedar Point, Kings Island, Canada's Wonderland Knott's Berry Farm and Kings Dominion have meaningfully accelerated, reflecting the strength of our loyal customer base and the value of the investments we made at those parks this season. On a combined basis, attendance at those 5 parks over the past 4 weeks was up 8% or approximately 250,000 visits. Canada's Wonderland and the introduction of the new dual launch coaster AlpenFury has been nothing short of a standout success story. Since the July 12 debut of its new coaster, the park has seen attendance improve by 20% over the prior year during the same time frame, which in turn has helped drive a more than 20% lift in Fast Lane sales. Moreover, since the rise opening, there has been a surge in season pass sales, up more than 100,000 units in the weeks following the coaster's debut. We are seeing similar success at the legacy Six Flags parks where we concentrated our efforts and our capital investments in 2025, including Magic Mountain, Fiesta Texas, Six Flags Great America and Six Flags Over Georgia. Attendance at those 4 parks was up approximately 76,000 visits or 6% over the last 4 weeks of July. In addition to the green shoots we are seeing emerge from this year's capital program, our 2026 season pass program is off to an outstanding start across the system. We launched the program several weeks earlier this year to take advantage of anticipated pent- up market demand. Since the end of the second quarter, we've seen increased season pass sales of 700,000 units, reducing our second quarter deficit by more than half in only 1 month. The strong start represents the first step in building a solid foundation for the 2026 season and provides meaningful momentum for the remainder of the 2025 season. Now let me address our updated guidance. Through the first 7 months of the year, we've seen both the impact of a very challenging first half and the encouraging rebound that began in July. Taking this into account, along with our outlook for the balance of the year, we are revising our full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance to a range of $860 million to $910 million from the prior range of $1.08 billion to $1.12 billion. This revision reflects the impact of the extraordinary weather disruptions earlier in the year, a smaller active pass base heading into the second half and a consumer who appears more value conscious than a year ago. It also reflects the strong response we've seen in July and the weather conditions over the balance of the year are comparable to the prior year and the current macroeconomic conditions maintain. At the midpoint of this guidance, we expect attendance for the second half of the year to be flat compared to the last year after accounting for the loss of 500,000 visits associated with the removal of lower-margin, higher-risk winter holiday events at 4 parks this year. We expect that in-park per capita spending over the second half of 2025 will be down approximately 3%, consistent with our most recent trends and reflective of the projected impact of planned promotional offers and attendance mix over the balance of the year. And lastly, the midpoint reflects the expected reduction of second half operating costs and expenses, excluding adjusted EBITDA add-backs, by approximately $90 million compared with the second half of 2024. Achieving our back half cost reduction goal of $90 million will bring full year costs and expenses down 3% compared to last year's full year combined spend for the legacy companies. As we noted in this morning's release, approximately 1/3 of these savings reflect costs that were shifted in the first half of the year and approximately 2/3 representing permanent cost savings. On an annualized run rate basis, the second half permanent cost savings bring our total merger-related cost synergies at the end of 2025 to approximately $120 million when compared with the cost synergies we achieved in 2024. With that, I'd like to turn the call back over to Richard.