Thanks, Jason. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. The strong comp momentum from the second half last year has carried into the first half this year with positive comps fueling both top and bottom line results above expectations again in Q2. Our sales growth continues to outpace the industry driven by a high single-digit comp increase at Journeys. Overall comps grew 4%, marking our fourth consecutive quarter of positive comps for the company and for Journeys, reinforcing the meaningful progress we're making in our strategic plan to accelerate growth. Journeys' comps for the trailing 12 months are now up just over 10% as Journeys continues to gain market share. While the second quarter in general is a lower volume quarter for us as consumers pursue summer activities and devote less time to shopping, we're further encouraged by the strong performance of the back-to-school and tax-free shopping period that began at the end of the quarter in July and accelerated into August. Notably, Journeys' comps are up double digits third quarter to date on top of double-digit comps for the same period last year, which marked the inflection of Journeys' comps as the next wave of Journeys' transformational initiatives gain considerable traction. The consumer environment remains much the same with customer shopping when there's a reason and retreating when there's not. We saw this choppiness overall again in the quarter. However, our exceptional and experienced merchant teams were more than ready for our back-to-school team and youth customer with newness and freshness and just the right brands and styles to satisfy exactly what this choosy customer is looking for. Importantly, when you have what our customer wants, they're willing to pay for what they want, driving increased ASPs and higher average transaction size. While we expected the bottom line to be below last year in this low-volume quarter, we drove higher sales and better expense leverage than expected, offsetting more promotional pressure from a challenging U.K. market. Before I dive deeper into the business, I'll highlight a few more notable call-outs for the second quarter. First, both store and digital channels posted positive growth, although stores were the real highlight, reflecting both the shift of our investment into this channel and results from our strategic initiatives, including doubling down on selecting and training our people to drive improved store conversion and sales. We know our store teams are a differentiator among competition and we're strengthening the outstanding service that is a hallmark of our concepts. Store comps accelerated as we moved through the quarter and hit back to school and are a material driver of profitability, particularly in the back half with higher back-to-school and holiday volumes. Second, Johnston & Murphy inflected to positive comps. We've been working on delivering more fresh and distinctive products in response to headwinds J&M experienced last year. We were pleased with these positive results from injecting more newness into the assortment and have even more newness planned for both footwear and apparel later this year. And finally, our investments in loyalty where we're at a new milestone of 12 million members and marketing and awareness campaigns along with new stores and remodels like our Journeys 4.0 supported the growth in the second quarter and will contribute for the upcoming holiday season as well. And now for more Q2 color and initiatives for each business, starting with Journeys. Improving Journeys' performance has been our #1 priority. Our strategic efforts are achieving tremendous results as the first phase of our strategic growth plan focused primarily on product and injecting the assortment with more newness, excitement and storytelling delivered its fourth consecutive quarter of high single or double-digit comps this quarter. While we continue efforts to elevate and strengthen the product offering, we have in place a robust plan focused on brand and customer to extend these gains, reach a wider audience of teens and drive significant additional growth for Journeys. I'll discuss our progress with this plan after discussing our other businesses. Journeys' Q2 comp strength was again broad-based as our teen customers' preferences have been shifting in favor of a more diversified product offering. Six brands across both casual and athletic posted double-digit gains, with other brands demonstrating strong growth too. Sandals trended positively along with low profile and 2000s running inspired styles. And although we're still in the middle of summer, we're seeing green shoots in certain boot brands as well. We expect growth in both the casual and athletic categories again in Q3, and our assortment remains well balanced among athletic, casual and campus styles. We continue to be excited about some new brands we've been introducing or reintroducing at Journeys. However, we're not dependent on these new brands to drive results. Our store initiatives delivered especially strong impact at Journeys where the teen purchases at the mall more frequently during back- to-school. Journeys store teams drove double-digit store comps with noteworthy increases in conversion and much higher transaction size. Consumers responded vigorously to tax-free holidays this year and our 4.0 store remodels contributed nicely to the gains as well. Our focus here is improvement in the top volume stores, and our top 250 stores outpaced the gains elsewhere in the chain. Congratulations to Andy Gray and the Journeys team on this outstanding performance. Now turning to Schuh. It was an especially challenging quarter in what continues to be a challenging U.K. retail environment. Sales started off slowly across the industry at the beginning of summer, with fewer reasons to shop, and Schuh saw major store traffic and comp declines in May and June. The U.K. customer remains cautious and quite selective, putting pressure on the footwear category with purchases only of must-have items. In response to this softness, footwear retailers became more promotional to spur consumer demand. To maintain share and rightsize inventories in this sluggish and highly competitive market, Schuh was considerably more promotional, which pressured gross margins. It was a tougher sandal season on the other side of the Atlantic. And while many of the same brands and styles at Journeys are resonating, less interest in the rest of the assortment is pronounced. We took action on inventory, which was in a better position by the end of the quarter. Traffic picked up in July and much higher store conversion and transaction size, together with improved online sales, turned Schuh comp positive with late summer purchases and the lead-up to back-to-school shopping. This improvement has extended into August and back-to-school, but we expect it will continue to be volatile. Looking ahead, the team has implemented a number of initiatives, including several from the Journeys playbook, to improve the trend in the near term. The most immediate of these are to bring in more newness and in-depth -- and in-demand products, leveraging the enhanced brand partnerships and improved product access Schuh has gained, driving traffic to the stores through the CRM, marketing and loyalty initiatives underway, eliminating nonaccretive discounting and aggressively focusing on store customer conversion with the recently launched ATV program. Turning now to Johnston & Murphy and our branded business. After success with J&M's strategic repositioning into a more casual, more comfortable, multi-category lifestyle brand, we've been diligently working to deliver more newness and distinctive product in response to last year's headwinds. While we still have work to do, we were pleased to see overall comps inflect positively in Q2. Comp sales in our full-price stores and digital channels were nicely positive, fueled by gains in conversion and transaction size. Customers embraced our newest assortments with blazers, pants and a revamped dress shoe collection as standouts, offsetting softness in wholesale and factory stores which cater to more price-aware shoppers. Another highlight was a nice tick-up in gross margin as a result of J&M's costing and sourcing efforts and more full-price selling despite some tariff pressure. We continue to ramp up innovation with even more footwear newness for the back half, along with new fabrics and design details for our apparel programs. Going forward, we're committed to increased freshness across our categories with a redesigned product development process aimed at more frequent in-season introductions and speeding up of our innovation pipeline. Accelerating its brand repositioning to build awareness and acquire new customers is J&M's other area of focus. This includes the continuation of its 175 Years Young media campaign, highlighting the brand's 175th anniversary and status as the longest continually operated footwear brand in the United States, further shifting marketing funding to support brand building, completing new store remodels where we've seen a double-digit sales lift, and opening new stores to build awareness and counteract the deleverage the brand has been experienced from closed stores. And finally, stay tuned, we'll be turning up the excitement even further in Q3 with the debut of a new brand ambassador and campaign. Rounding out the branded business, as we've discussed, we're resetting the Genesco Brands Group portfolio this year, sunsetting some licenses and activating a major new one. Pull forward of product we're liquidating helped sales in the quarter but substantially affected gross margins in addition to the impact from tariffs, which affects this business the most. We're truly thrilled about the growth potential of our recently announced footwear partnership for Wrangler, an iconic and legendary brand that embodies American authenticity, hard work and adventure. We're building the footwear category from the ground up with the official product launch next fall in 2026. And now coming back to Journeys, we want to update you on the exciting progress we're making in our Journeys transformation plan. While the team, especially the Team Girl, is well served with fashion apparel in the mall, no concept other than Journeys goes across athletic, casual and campus footwear for the style-led team. This is how we are differentiated and the white space we identified to build on the traditional strength of Journeys to serve a wider teen audience interested in style and trend that is 6 to 7x larger than the market we've historically served. We're focused on 4 key areas to achieve this and to be the destination for where this consumer shops for the latest footwear for all versions of their style. First, we continue to drive product elevation and diversify footwear leadership with best-in-class premium footwear brands. Premium is a key aspect of our strategy, more choice product to serve this wider group of customers. Product elevation is generating higher average selling prices highlighted by an increase in second quarter average transaction value into the double digits. We're reinforcing our core strengths in casual and canvas while thoughtfully complementing with premium athletic. This powerful balance of casual, canvas and athletic broadens our reach across segments and defines our footwear leadership. Increased allocations and access through brand partnership are key goals here. Second, we're investing in the Journeys brand, building momentum with refreshed positioning that is style-led and aimed at building awareness with the expanded group of teen customers. We've elevated and integrated our storytelling across journeys.com, our in- store digital network and social channels to build credibility with our core style-focused consumer. We're continuing to invest in content, influencers and social, including long-form content with our Jazmine Bigfoot series which has garnered almost 90 million views so far across social platforms. We're increasing our brand partner activations this fall to drive more buzz and community engagement. And in September, we're unveiling a new brand platform and campaign, Life on Loud, which has great energy, uses music to connect with our customer and is at a scale and with media spend we've never done at Journeys before. Third, we're elevating the customer experience, especially in stores, through the ongoing rollout of our new impactful 4.0 store format. We needed an elevated setting to attract new customers and call attention to our more premium products. These stores feature a more modern aesthetic, better product presentation and a fresh take on Journeys' energetic brand DNA. The results have exceeded expectations with remodeled locations seeing stronger traffic, better conversion, higher transaction values and more new customer acquisition, all leading to a sales lift of more than 25% for stores remodeled to date in this format. With over 55 stores converted so far and more than 80 expected by yearend, this initiative is fast becoming a cornerstone and meaningful contributor to our transformation. And finally, we continue to harness the strength of our people. Our store teams are passionate brand ambassadors who represent the heart of the Journeys brand. And I've already spoken about the impressive results our field team is achieving with a stronger team at retail engaged in better selling behaviors and stepped-up customer engagement. With compelling product, clearer brand identity and a more elevated shopping experience, we are confident in the road ahead and the tremendous opportunity and value Journeys can unlock. Now turning to our outlook. We are encouraged with our results through the first half of the year, excited by the strong momentum during back-to-school, especially Journeys positively comping last year's positive results, and focused on driving improved sales and profits capitalizing on the larger volumes during the holidays. Although we have performed at levels ahead of our expectations since the last time we gave guidance, we know we will have to absorb a second round of tariff increases and navigate through the uncertainty in the external consumer environment in the U.S. and especially in the U.K. Our overall comps have accelerated into the third quarter, but we are also mindful of the slower period between back-to-school and holiday. While we are really pleased with the momentum and the opportunity in our business for the back half, with all these puts and takes, we are reiterating our full year adjusted EPS guidance range of $1.30 to $1.70. Sandra will take you through the details. We still have a lot of work to recapture our peak operating profit levels, but we expect fiscal '26 will be another step in the right direction. Before turning the call over, I'd like to thank our teams for their tremendous dedication and incredible execution, which is evident in all the efforts to mitigate tariffs and in the performance during back-to-school. This good work gives me confidence we will achieve continued success over the balance of the year and beyond. And now Sandra will take you through the specifics of our financial results and outlook.