Thank you, Sam, and thank you to everyone who has joined our call today. Before we get into the details of our third quarter results, which exceeded our expectations for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA, I want to take a few moments to discuss the major development of this week. This morning, we announced the closing of a $50 million term loan agreement with Comvest Partners, a multibillion-dollar investment management firm. Our CFO, Oliver Reeves, will cover the particulars of this financing in a few moments. But the clear takeaway is that Surf Air Mobility is capitalized to execute against our transformation plans. The combination of this financing and the work we are doing to reduce liabilities has enabled us to strengthen our balance sheet and has addressed our near-term liquidity constraints. As a result, we can now move forward at pace with our transformation plan. As referenced in the investor presentation we posted on our website this morning, we have a 4-phase transformation plan. The first phase, which is now complete, has been to improve our capital structure, strengthen our balance sheet, put the right management in place and realize synergies from our Southern merger. Since May, I have been working closely with the Board to promote leaders and recruit external talent for our organization. We have successfully bolstered our ranks with strong operational leaders with decades of airline experience who are already making a big difference in our organization. In the wake of our merger with Southern, we have realized opportunities to streamline our operations, drive efficiencies and eliminate redundant costs. As I mentioned last quarter, we are implementing new systems and workflows, coupled with real-time operational and financial KPIs to accurately measure performance against aviation standards. As we optimize our footprint, we are exiting unprofitable routes. And now with a solidified balance sheet and adequate funding, we will resolve deferred maintenance, which will improve aircraft availability, flight completion rates and profitability. We have a clear strategy and a clear path in front of us. Phase 2 of our transformation plan is optimization. The first step in our optimization phase is to improve the productivity and efficiency of our airline operations to maximize profitability. In the coming year, our focus will be on the bottom line. We're focused on improving utilization of our two most important resources, people and aircraft. We are redesigning and rethinking how we operate and how we utilize technology to make that happen. As we exit unprofitable routes, revenue is expected to decrease and profitability and cash flow will increase, helping us finance and fuel profitable growth. As part of the optimization of our airline operations, we will continue to exit unprofitable routes, allowing the reallocation of aircraft to other existing and new routes over time. By doing so, we can adjust the timing of purchases of new aircraft and match the timing to our route expansion phase in 2026 and 2027. This month, we have taken two deliveries from Textron Aviation, which we will immediately deploy. We have shifted future aircraft deliveries to early 2026, given our ability to leverage redeployed aircraft in our existing fleet to be more capital efficient. The second step of our optimization phase is the recalibration of our on-demand business. We are expanding our market share in the higher-margin jet category, securing inventory with volume purchase agreements, pursuing international partnerships and leveraging the Surf OS software platform. These efforts will drive both revenue and profitability in the on-demand business over time. The third step of our optimization phase is to drive efficiencies from using the Surf OS operating platform, first internally across our airline operations and then with a few launch customers. Recall from our call last quarter, we spoke in depth about our new agreement with Palantir to build and deploy a category-defining operating system and an all-in-one suite of software tools, enabling operators to more efficiently run their businesses. Components will include flight distribution, airline and charter operations, revenue and demand management, business intelligence, financial reporting and customer service. We are making great strides in the development of the platform, and we are already using components in our commercial and operations teams. As the largest commuter airline in the U.S. by scheduled departures, Surf Air is uniquely positioned to develop, test and deploy this solution. Once completed, it will open up the regional air mobility segment to us, which is estimated by McKinsey to be between $75 billion and $115 billion by 2035. This represents an enormous opportunity to fully leverage what we are building for ourselves to generate revenue from other Part 135 operators. The operators we are paying today to fly charters for us can also become customers of our software in the future. As we look beyond 2025, we have expansion and acceleration phases. We will launch new Tier 1 routes, broadly deploy Surf OS to additional third-party operators and introduce new electrification technologies. Ultimately, this will enable us to further leverage our air mobility platform to accelerate the adoption of new aviation technologies. Let me take a moment to highlight a few of the key accomplishments we achieved in the third quarter and what you should expect us to achieve during the fourth quarter. During the third quarter, we have, exceeded our guidance for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. Announced our plan to form a new venture, Surf Air Technologies LLC, and entered an agreement with Palantir to power our operating system for the advanced air mobility industry, and we realized synergies from our Southern Airways merger. In the fourth quarter, we have raised $50 million in new financing to fund our transformation plan and path to profitability. Taken the first two deliveries of our 116 Cessna Grand Caravan aircraft order with Textron Aviation and continue to make significant progress on expanding our Surf OS software platform. Let me now summarize what you have heard me discuss. We are here today at a key inflection point for Surf Air Mobility. We have strengthened our balance sheet, improved our capital structure and address our near-term liquidity constraints. We have made great strides in realizing the synergies from our Southern Airways merger. We have deployed Surf OS internally to drive efficiencies and further improve operations and will broadly offer the software to third-party operators in the future. And we will leverage our exclusive relationship with Textron Aviation and third-party partners to develop and deploy electrification technology and accelerate the adoption of other new available technologies. Surf Air is now poised to deliver shareholder value in both the coming months as well as the coming years. We are incredibly excited to embark on this journey and we invite you to join us. With that, let me now turn the call over to Oliver to discuss the financing and our third quarter results in a little more detail. Oliver?