Thank you, Jen, and good afternoon, everyone. Q4 was a solid finish to a standout year for Reddit, Inc. Both the strength and the consistency of our results continue to shine. These strong results included, first, total Q4 revenues grew 70% year over year. That's a particularly solid result given the tougher comp of 71% in 2024. Second, profitability hit a new high. Net income reaching $252 million, 35% of revenue. And adjusted EBITDA hit $327 million, 45% of revenue, making us a rule of 115 company this quarter, also a high. Diluted EPS reached $1.24, up more than 3x 2024. And third, for the first time, cash flow crossed $2.5 billion in a quarter, reaching $264 million in Q4. Free cash flow was 36% of revenue this quarter. The consistency of the results is also worthy of review. First, Q4 was Reddit, Inc.'s sixth consecutive quarter of over 60% revenue growth. Next, it was also Reddit, Inc.'s sixth consecutive quarter of 90% gross margins. Third, stock-based compensation expense was below 20% of revenue the third consecutive quarter. Hitting 13% in Q4. It was nice to see negative dilution for the year, with total shares outstanding falling slightly to 206.1 million, well below our medium-term dilution guide of 1% to 3%. These strong and consistent results enabled our business to scale successfully in 2025. On a full-year basis, 2025 revenues were $2.2 billion, up 69% and gross margins were 91.2%, up 70 basis points. Total adjusted costs grew 35% for the year, about half the rate of revenue growth. Full-year net income was $530 million, 24% of revenue, and adjusted EBITDA was $545 million at 38% margin. Reddit, Inc.'s incremental adjusted EBITDA margins for the year were 60%. Full-year free cash flow was $684 million, more than triple 2024. Diluted earnings per share reached $2.62, up from a loss last year. Now provide more color on our Q4 results. Q4 revenues of $726 million grew 70% year over year driven by a ramp in ad revenue, which grew 75% in Q4 to $690 million. As we saw broad-based strength across all three sections of the ad funnel. Other revenue, which includes revenue from our content licensing business, reached $36 million, up 8%. U.S. revenues were up 68%. International revenues were up 78%. Average revenue per user or ARPU grew 42% year over year. To $5.98. Moving to expenses. Our Q4 total adjusted costs, which included both our adjusted cost of revenue and adjusted OpEx, were $399 million in Q4, up 46% year over year. The expense growth rate was slightly elevated from the prior two quarters, which had averaged about 38% and the full year where costs were up 35%. Building on that thought, the main cost driver continues to be operating expenses, which on an adjusted basis were $340 million in Q4, about 85% of total adjusted expenses. Adjusted OpEx costs grew 41%, driven by investments in two areas: hiring and marketing. On hiring, our pace was similar to prior quarters. The company ended with 2,555 total headcount. Up 14% versus last year and up about 3% sequentially from Q3, the same pace as the prior quarters. In Q4, we added slightly less than 70 net people. With hires continuing to be focused in revenue-generating functions. Our ROI from sales and ad tech investments remains strong, multiples of the cost. G and A headcount was lower than last year and about the same as year-end 2023 as we continue to leverage back-of-house resources. And secondly, on marketing, we invested more this quarter. The spend was in the mid-single digits as a percentage of Q4 revenues. We target our spend in two areas. User marketing and brand marketing. To drive traffic and awareness. On user marketing, spend levels were sequentially higher than in Q3, driven by increases in volume and price. Price increases were driven by both seasonality as media costs rose in Q4 versus Q3, and geography, as most of the spends were targeted in the U.S. Market. On the brand side, we launched new audience campaigns focused in areas like parenting, entertainment, and sports, which had some encouraging results, but there's more to do. So rounding out Q4 with a few more numbers, Reddit, Inc. remains capital light. Continue to benefit from AI in many ways without the AI costs. CapEx was $3 million. We ended the year with a strong cash and liquidity position, Cash and cash equivalents on the balance sheet ended at nearly $2.5 billion, up $250 million sequentially and over $630 million from last year. So that covers Q4 and the full-year results. Let me speak to a couple of additional items. First, earlier today, we announced that our board of directors authorized a share repurchase program of up to a billion dollars with no set expiration date. For many leading companies, strategic capital deployment has been an important driver of their total shareholder returns, And specifically, repurchasing shares could be an attractive incremental tool to drive TSR, the medium and long term. For Reddit, Inc., we're proving our ability to grow durably at scale with our inflecting profitability underscoring the attractive incremental margins inherent in our business. As we think about our three capital allocation priorities, we will continue to prioritize investing in our core business first. Next, we'll look to do M and A where it makes sense, both tuck-ins and more scaled opportunities. Looking to buy capabilities, technologies, and companies. And third, when it makes sense, we'll repurchase shares. Our differentiated financial profile gives us the opportunity to invest in all three priorities. We plan to be in the market from time to time to buy shares opportunistically, We'll continue to be prudent about the financial management targeting to keep over a billion dollars of cash in the balance sheet consistent with our capital framework. So switching gears to the second item, I'll now share an update on our user reporting. Big picture, we want to make sure the metrics we share align with how we're managing the business. As you heard from Steve, product strategy is evolving. We're focusing on making it easier for all users to engage with content on the platform and find immediate value regardless of whether users logged in or logged out. Our goal is to grow all users. As a result, the distinction of whether a user is logged in or logged out has become less of a management focus and less important to how we think about and manage the business. As a result, we were updating our disclosures starting in 2026. To better reflect the metrics we use to run the business and evaluate our operating performance as we scale. Specifically, starting with Q3 2026 disclosures, we'll continue to report The US and international DAUQ and WAUQ numbers as we've done historically. But we will no longer report logged in and logged out metrics. Between now and Q3, we will continue to report logged in and logged out metrics for the 2026. Turning now to the outlook. We'll share our internal thoughts on revenue and adjusted EBITDA for the 2026. As well as some additional thoughts on stock-based compensation. In the 2026, we estimate revenue in the range of $595 million to $605 million representing 52% to 54% year over year revenue growth with a midpoint of about 53%. Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $110 million to $220 million representing approximately 82% to 91% year over year growth and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 36% at the midpoint. The Q1 guide implies a total adjusted cost base of $385 million which would be down sequentially to Q4 expenses. I'll also share a thought on the full-year stock-based compensation expenses SBC was $387 million or about 18% of revenue in 2025. Similarly, in 2026, we're aiming for stock-based compensation to be in the high teens as a percentage of revenue. Similar to our historic revenue trends, expect nominal SPC expenses to increase each quarter. We'll target dilution at the lower end of our medium-term guide of 1% to 3%. So overall, it was a strong finish to a solid 2025 for the company, and our attention now turns to 2026 as we continue to focus on converting our leading revenue growth and high margins into meaningful cash flow and returns for our shareholders. That concludes my comment. Let me turn the call back over to Steven Huffman.