Thank you, Chris, and good afternoon, everyone. As George mentioned in his earlier comments, the quarter was a bit better than we had expected due in part to cost management, timing of marketing spend and extending the life of some of the trading partner portfolios. Now let's turn to the segments. In our Consumer segment, revenue was down 12% year-over-year driven in part by the nonrenewal of a program in retail and by a decline in accounts from the dynamics we have discussed in the past. Specifically, active accounts in our retail channel remain impacted by a change in consumer foot traffic patterns and more digital competition. The direct channel continues to be impacted by attrition in legacy brands as we invest solely in building our GO2bank brand. This dynamic continues to weigh on overall growth rates. The rate of decline in the direct deposit accounts has moderated notably on a year-over-year basis. I'd point this out because our direct deposit accounts are more highly engaged with higher volume and revenue than nondirect deposit accounts. To the extent that the decline in direct deposit accounts continues to moderate, it should help slow the rate of decline for the overall segment. Within this segment, the retail channel saw revenue decline in the mid-teens year-over-year from the nonrenewal of program and lower accounts. Now turning to the direct division and GO2bank. The direct channel continues to see improved performance, and we remain encouraged by the growth of GO2bank. Revenue in this channel, which was just over 30% of total segment revenue in the quarter, was down mid-single digits from the prior year versus double-digit declines in each quarter of 2022. While accounts were down in the mid-teens, revenue per account continued to grow due to improving engagement rates, particularly with GO2bank, and is helping to offset the drag from the attrition in legacy portfolios. Within the direct channel, we believe the moderation in revenue declines is evidence that we're moving closer to an inflection point for revenue in this channel. The legacy brands continued to see declines in revenue of approximately 30% in the quarter with slightly larger declines in accounts and GDV. However, GO2bank saw revenue growth of 40% over last year driven by solid growth in direct deposit accounts and GDV as well as strong growth in revenue per account as we drive more engagement in this customer base. As a result, GO2bank in the quarter represented a bit more than 50% of the revenue in the direct channel and now comprises roughly 15% of the Consumer segment. Again, this is a journey, but we are encouraged by what we're seeing from GO2bank, its growing impact on the direct channel and the increasing potential for the direct channel to have a positive impact on the overall Consumer segment. While there are many moving parts in this segment, the metrics on a per account basis remain positive. Revenue per account was up low double digits due to higher volumes per account as well as growth in our overdraft product while being partially muted by the nonrenewable program in retail. We continue to see positive trends as we retain the more highly engaged consumers while continuing to hone our top-of-the-funnel strategies in the direct channel to acquire, engage and retain higher-value accounts. While retail and direct saw solid growth in revenue per active count, the direct channel has higher revenue per account and continues to see faster growth. The overall segment will benefit from the gradual improvement in mix over time. Last, looking at profits and margins. We continue to be effective in managing the cost structure of the business as we work to reposition this segment. Many of our expenses are volume related and will come down with the decline in revenue while we also continue to focus on making improvements in areas such as risk and customer care, particularly in the direct channel. I would also point out that in the first quarter, marketing spend was somewhat lower than prior year and our own expectations for Q1. However, we expect to deploy those funds in the coming quarters. So while this prevented some benefit to Q1 results, it does not have any impact on our outlook for the full year. In the B2B services segment, which is comprised of the BaaS and PayCard channels, aggregate revenue growth was driven by our BaaS channel where revenue was up approximately 30%. The growth of one of our larger BaaS customers continues to power the top line while we faced headwinds on revenue and actives from the roll-off of 2 BaaS partners. However, this impact modestly outperformed our expectations as some of the de-conversion activity did not happen as quickly as we had expected. That said, we expect the roll-off to be completed in the second quarter. Accounts, GDV and purchase volume were all up year-over-year in the PayCard channel. Similar to last quarter, nondiscretionary spending such as grocery and fuel are making up a larger percentage of spending, and those categories typically have lower interchange rates. As it relates to ATM transactions, volumes were up but consumers continue to be more sensitive to finding surcharge-free ATMs, which is impacting our fee revenue. Segment profit was flat year-over-year as the impact of the BaaS fixed profit structure continues to weigh on the aggregate segment margin. The PayCard business had margin compression during the quarter from the lower interchange rates, more fee-free ATM transactions and higher cost to support the solid growth in accounts and volume. Turning to the Money Movement segment. There was modest growth in revenue and a slight decline in segment profit. Our tax business, which we refer to as TPG, had mid-single-digit revenue growth from a solid, seasonally strong quarter driven by growth in refund transfer volumes and a successful taxpayer advance program. Green Dot Network saw a mid-single-digit revenue decline in line with the decline in cash transfers, principally from the impact of the decline in active accounts in our other segments. This trend has moderated significantly from the double-digit declines that we saw in each of the quarters in 2021 and 2022. As we discussed last quarter, we are seeing solid growth in third-party volumes, which represented just a bit below 60% of total transactions, helping to offset fewer reloads associated with declines in our active account base. Our final segment, Corporate and Other, reflects the interest income we earn in our bank, net of revenue share on interest we pay to our BaaS partners, as well as salaries and administrative costs and some smaller intercompany adjustments. Interest income, net of partner interest sharing, was down year-over-year due to a higher rate environment. As we discussed last quarter, the rapidly rising rate environment has created an imbalance between the blended yields we earn on cash and investments and the rate we pay our best partners. Salaries and other general and administrative expenses were up 5% versus last year due in large part to the expenses associated with the technology conversions. Turning to guidance. We are reiterating our full year guidance of revenue in a range of $1.38 billion to $1.46 billion, adjusted EBITDA in a range of $180 million to $190 million and non-GAAP EPS of $1.77 to $1.93. We're happy with the first quarter results, and we're off to a good start to the year, and I remain confident in the range that we are currently targeting. We intend to spend the marketing dollars we pushed in Q1 throughout the remainder of the year. It's still early in the year, and there's a healthy debate when it comes to the economic outlook. I'd like to have another quarter of performance on the books before deciding whether to change our targets for the year. To help you with your modeling, let me provide a bit more color on how we see the general cadence for the rest of 2023. Our outlook for revenue is for flattish to slight revenue declines in the second quarter and third quarter with the prospect of some growth in the fourth quarter as we ramp up an exciting BaaS partner and other smaller partners across the business. I continue to expect about 2/3 of EBITDA to incur in the first half of the year, in line with our seasonal patterns, while margins are expected to be the lowest in the second and third quarters and the fourth quarter to be more or less flat with the prior year. As a general matter, I expect our Q2 margin to be down year-over-year due to some onetime cost benefits in 2022 that we discussed last year on our earnings call. I would also like to provide a bit more color on our active accounts, which I know is a key metric that the market follows. As we move through the second and third quarters, we expect declines in accounts in the Consumer segment to accelerate beyond what we have recently experienced, and we want to make sure that you are aware of this as you build your models. Specifically, in the direct channel, we will be sunsetting some brands in the second quarter as we complete our platform conversions. While we are making efforts to covert those accounts to GO2bank, we expect that many will not convert and will accelerate the attrition of these legacy brands. As I mentioned, we've seen our year-over-year declines in active accounts to moderate, and this accelerated attrition in the second quarter could slow that momentum a bit in the Consumer segment. That said, our focus on making GO2bank the driving force of this channel remains intact. In fact, after this occurs, GO2bank will become a larger part of that channel and its growth rate will have a more pronounced impact as we move forward. In the B2B segment, we will experience the continued runoff of de-converting partners, would expect growth of PayCard and launching a new BaaS partner to result in improving account metrics as we work through the second half of the year. Now let me provide a bit more color on full year financial outlook for each of the segments. In the Consumer segment, I expect revenue and segment profit to decline year-over-year in the mid-teens, a bit higher than our initial thoughts for the year due to the accelerated attrition of the legacy brand that I just mentioned earlier. In our B2B segment, I expect revenue growth in the upper teens with flattish segment profit. Turning to the Money Movement segment, I still expect revenue growth in the low single digits with flattish segment profits. In the Corporate and Other segment, we still face the $15 million to $20 million earnings headwind from the higher revenue share while expenses should begin to reflect our progress in cutting costs as we move through the platform conversions. For the full year, I expect our non-GAAP effective tax rate to be 23.5% and the diluted weighted average share count to be approximately 52 million shares. With that, let me turn it over to George for his closing comments.