With both revenue and adjusted EBITDA landing well above the high end of our guidance, we ended 2025 with incredible momentum and a reaffirmation of the strength of our business and the value of visual content. Q4 revenue was $282,300,000, up 14.1% or 12.7% on a currency-neutral basis. Full-year revenue of $981,300,000 was up 4.5% or 3.8% on a currency-neutral basis. As Craig just mentioned, this full-year revenue performance is a new record. This is the highest annual reported revenue this company has seen in its over thirty years of existence, a fantastic achievement that is a testament not only to the power of our content, but also to the hard work and dedication of our employees across this business. Q4 results include approximately $40,000,000 of revenue recognized from the two new multiyear licensing agreements Craig mentioned. In accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, these deals had heavier accelerated revenue recognition in the quarter, with revenue allocated across creative, editorial, and other revenue, as a result of the content included in those deals. However, these deals combined have a total deal value of approximately $65,000,000, spanning the multiyear life of the agreements. These deals have combined cash impacts which create a future revenue stream beyond Q4 of $15,000,000 in 2025, $20,000,000 in 2026, and the balance then spread evenly across the remainder of the deal terms. Given the magnitude of these deals and the accelerated revenue recognition in Q4, there is impact across most of the financial metrics we typically comment on each quarter. I will do my best to highlight wherever there was an especially material impact. Also included in our results are certain other impacts of revenue recognition timing, which reduced Q4 revenue growth by approximately 170 basis points; however, increased the full-year growth rate by 160 basis points. Excluding the impact of the two large deals and other timing elements, Q4 and full-year revenue would have been down 0.7%, or 2.1% currency neutral, and down 1.4%, or 2.0% currency neutral, respectively. While our agency business remains challenged as expected, both corporate and media returned to growth in the fourth quarter with good momentum as we exited the year. Corporate was particularly strong with growth over 25% in Q4, fueled by gains across most of our sub-industry segments and benefiting from the impact of those two larger multiyear deals. Media was in low single-digit growth in Q4, including positive performance in our Broadcast and Production segment, which was the segment weakened most by the dual Hollywood strikes as well as the LA fires. Geographically, the Americas region, which is where the majority of the revenue from the two large deals was recorded, was up 20.8% in Q4 on a currency-neutral basis. EMEA was up 6.1%, and APAC was down 13% due primarily to challenges in the agency business. Annual subscription revenue grew 1% year on year and was essentially flat on a currency-neutral basis, with Premium Access, our largest subscription, up 4.1% in Q4, or 5.3% currency neutral. Annual subscription revenue was 48.6% of total revenue in Q4, compared to 54.9% in the prior year, with that step back due to the fact that neither of the two large deals are included in subscription revenue. So we see a formulaic step back here only. This is not in any way an indication of the health of our subscription base. In fact, excluding impact from those deals, annual subscription revenue mix was 56.6%, meaningfully up from 54.9% in Q4 2024. Active annual subscribers totaled 278,000 in the Q4 LTM period, compared to 314,000 in the comparable 2024 period. The decline was driven by iStock, where we continue to see some impact from the June 2025 discontinuation of our free trial customer acquisition program. However, Getty Images Holdings, Inc.'s annual subscriber counts remain stable and we continue to see Unsplash Plus subscriber counts grow. The annual subscription revenue retention rate was 89.9% for the Q4 LTM period, compared to 92.9% in the corresponding 2024 period. The year-on-year decline primarily reflects the absence of major political, sporting, and certain one-time events that boosted à la carte subscriber spend in 2024. Paid downloads were 92,100,000, and our video attachment rate was 15.9% in Q4 LTM, both metrics relatively flat to the prior-year period. Q4 creative revenue was $149,000,000, up 4.6% year on year and 3.1% on a currency-neutral basis. The increase was primarily driven by the impact of the accelerated revenue from the two larger deals, but also reflects growth across Premium Access, Unsplash Plus, and custom content. These favorable impacts outweighed a continuation of challenging agency trends, which were a drag on creative, with agency declining 16% in Q4. For the full year, creative revenue was $556,900,000, up 0.7% or 0.2% currency neutral. Q4 editorial revenue was $109,400,000, up 21.4% year on year and 19.9% on a currency-neutral basis. All four editorial verticals—news, sport, entertainment, and archive—were in year-on-year growth, even while up against the challenging year-on-year compare driven by the 2024 election year. This strong editorial performance was driven in part by contribution from the two large deals as well as strong growth in assignments, which were up 20.1% year on year or 18.3% currency neutral. For the full year, editorial revenue was $369,600,000, an increase of 6.9% or 6.1% currency neutral with, again, growth across all four verticals, reflecting our outstanding coverage of more than 160,000 events annually and authentic historical visual content that only Getty Images Holdings, Inc. can deliver. Q4 other revenue was $23,900,000, an increase of $9,100,000 from Q4 2024, primarily due to the impact from the two large deals. For the full year, other revenue was $54,800,000, up 35.2% on a reported and currency-neutral basis. Revenue less our cost of revenue as a percentage of revenue was strong at 74.8%, compared with 73.5% in Q4 2024, and for the full year, 73.4% up from 73.1% in 2024, with the year-on-year increase due largely to product mix. Q4 SG&A expense was $111,600,000, up $6,100,000 year on year, with our expense rate decreasing to 39.5% of revenue from 42.7% last year, with the rate favorability driven by strong revenue performance. For the full year, SG&A increased by $8,200,000 to 42.4% of revenue, down from 43.4% last year, with that decrease in rate again primarily driven by the increase in revenue. Excluding stock-based compensation, SG&A was $107,100,000 in the quarter, up $6,000,000 year on year due primarily to approximately $2,500,000 of professional fees tied to the acceleration of our SOX compliance efforts and higher incentive compensation expense tied to strong financial performance. As a percentage of revenue, adjusted SG&A decreased to 37.9% of revenue from 40.9% of revenue in Q4 2024. For the full year, adjusted SG&A increased by $13,200,000 to $399,100,000, or 40.7% of revenue, compared to 41.1% of revenue in the prior year. For the full year, SG&A included $7,800,000 of SOX acceleration costs as expected and $9,900,000 of fees related to our ongoing AI litigation. Q4 adjusted EBITDA was $104,100,000, up 29.1% or 27.2% on a currency-neutral basis. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 36.9%, compared to 32.6% in Q4 2024. For 2025, adjusted EBITDA was $320,900,000, up 6.9% reported and 5.8% on a currency-neutral basis. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 32.7%, compared to 32% in 2024. Excluding the impact of accelerated SOX compliance costs and litigation costs, our full-year adjusted EBITDA margin would have been 34.5%. These outstanding profitability results reflect not only our record revenue performance, but also our company's long-standing demonstrated ability to manage costs and maintain fiscal discipline. CapEx was $13,000,000 in Q4, a decrease of $2,100,000 year over year. CapEx as a percentage of revenue was 4.6% compared to 6.1% in the prior-year period, with that rate favorability due not only to the decreased spend, but also to strong Q4 revenue delivery. For the full year, CapEx was $59,500,000, up $2,100,000 year over year, representing 6.1% of revenue, consistent with last year and within our expected range of 5% to 7% of revenue. Adjusted EBITDA less CapEx was $91,100,000 in Q4, up 39.1% or 38.3% on a currency-neutral basis. Adjusted EBITDA less CapEx margin was 32.3% compared to 26.5% in Q4 2024. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA less CapEx was $261,300,000, an increase of 7.6% or 7% currency neutral. Free cash flow was $7,700,000 in Q4, compared to $24,600,000 in Q4 2024. The decrease in free cash flow reflects higher cash interest expense of $45,100,000 in Q4, an increase of $22,400,000 over the prior year. Cash taxes paid in the quarter were $11,900,000, down from $13,300,000 in Q4 2024. For the full year, we generated $5,700,000 in free cash flow, compared with $60,900,000 in 2024, with that full-year decrease primarily driven by an increase in cash paid for merger-related expenses. We finished the year with $90,200,000 of balance sheet cash, down $31,000,000 from Q4 2024 and down $19,400,000 from 2025. The decrease in cash year on year is due to $45,700,000 of merger-related expenses, including $12,500,000 in Q4, as well as $36,400,000 of refinancing-related fees paid during the year, with $19,600,000 paid in the fourth quarter. As of December 31, we had total debt outstanding of $2,010,000,000, which included $628,000,000 of 10.5% senior secured notes issued in Q4 to fund our pending merger, with the proceeds held in escrow; $540,000,000 of 11.25% senior secured notes; €497,000,000 term loan, converted using exchange rates as of 12/31/2025 with an applicable rate of 7.94%; $295,000,000 of 14% senior unsecured notes; $40,000,000 of USD term loan at an 11.25% fixed rate; and $5,000,000 of 9.75% senior unsecured notes. We also have a $150,000,000 revolver that remains undrawn, giving us access to $240,200,000 of total liquidity as of December 31. Our net leverage was 4.0x at the end of Q4, compared to 3.97x in 2024. Considering the foreign exchange rates, applicable interest rates, and mandatory amortization on our debt balances as of December 31, our estimated cash interest for 2026, net of interest earned on cash held in escrow, is $188,000,000. Please note the first cash interest payment related to the $628,000,000 of merger financing currently held in escrow is due in May 2026, and the full-year 2026 cash interest estimate includes a second payment due on the merger outside end date of October. In summary, we are incredibly proud to have closed the year with a financial performance that meaningfully exceeded our guidance and reflects the value we continue to provide for our customers. We look forward to building on this momentum in 2026, with the added tailwind of a strong editorial events calendar, which culminated with us doing what we do best at the Winter Olympics. With that, let's turn to our full-year outlook for 2026. We anticipate revenue of $948,000,000 to $988,000,000, down 3.4% to up 0.6% year over year, and down 4.5% to up 0.5% currency neutral. Embedded in this guidance is an assumption for FX rates with the euro at 1.17 and the GBP at 1.34, which implies a tailwind on revenue of $11,200,000, of which approximately $7,500,000 is expected in the first quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA of $279,000,000 to $295,000,000, down 12.9% to 8.1% year over year, and down 13.9% to 9.1% currency neutral. Included in the adjusted EBITDA expectations is a similar cadence for estimated FX impact, with an approximate $3,600,000 tailwind in 2026, of which approximately $2,200,000 is expected in the first quarter. Please note the anticipated decline in revenue and adjusted EBITDA is entirely attributable to the timing of revenue recognition for the two large multiyear licensing agreements signed in 2025. This accelerated revenue impact creates a challenging comparison for 2026 and more than offsets the anticipated tailwind, especially in Q4, from the even-year editorial calendar. Excluding the $40,000,000 of accelerated revenue recognized in Q4, our full-year 2026 revenue outlook would reflect expected growth up 0.7% to 4.9% year over year, or down 0.5% to up 3.7% currency neutral, and our adjusted EBITDA would be down 2.4% to up 2.9%, or down 3.6% to up 1.7% currency neutral. So the emphasis here is that absent the impact of those challenging year-on-year comps, our core business is indeed expected to be in growth. On the cost side, our guidance includes approximately $5,600,000 in one-off increases in SG&A for continued SOX compliance acceleration efforts. Please note, all other merger-related costs are excluded from this guidance, as they are considered one-time in nature and, therefore, are excluded from adjusted EBITDA. Finally, any potential broader impacts which may result from global macroeconomic conditions remain unknown and may not be fully reflected in this guidance. With that, operator, please open the call for questions.