Thank you, Mike, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll begin with an overview of our fourth quarter and full year performance and then discuss our outlook for 2026. We ended the quarter with 3,097 global open studios, opening 78 gross new studios during Q4 with 51 in North America and 27 internationally. For the full year, our gross new studio openings were 341 with 252 in North America and 89 internationally. There were 47 global studio closures in the fourth quarter and 140 during 2025, representing approximately 4.5% of our global open studios for the year. Closure activity in the quarter included decommissioning of 16 nontraditional studios that were operating on Princess cruise ships. The remaining 31 traditional studio closures were in line with historical quarters and concentrated primarily within StretchLab, BFT and YogaSix. Moving forward, we expect closure rates to decline and be in the low to mid-single digits. We sold 53 licenses globally during Q4 and 179 licenses in 2025. 112 of the 179 licenses sold in the year were international and 67 were for North America. The North America license sales were lower during portions of the year as we temporarily paused sales activity to complete a comprehensive review and update of each brand's franchise disclosure documents. We expect updated FTDs for the 2026 cycle to be filed in the coming weeks as part of our normal renewal process. As of December 31, 2025, we had more than 830 licenses contractually obligated to open in North America and more than 760 international master franchise obligations. Of these, approximately 30% are currently more than 12 months behind their contractual development schedules and are considered inactive. Fourth quarter North America system-wide sales of $447 million were up approximately 5% year-over-year and same-store sales were negative 4.3%. The increase in system-wide sales was driven primarily by growth from net new studio openings. In 2025, system-wide sales increased approximately 13% to $1.7 billion from $1.6 billion in 2024 and full year same-store sales were 0.5%. North America run rate average unit volumes of $683,000 in the fourth quarter decreased 2% from $695,000 in the prior year period. The decrease was largely driven by lower average pricing for paying members, partially offset by a higher number of actively paying members. On a consolidated basis, revenue for the quarter was $83 million, flat from the prior year period. 76% of the revenue for the quarter was reoccurring, which we define as including all revenue streams, except for franchise territory revenues and equipment revenues given these materially occur upfront before a studio opens. In 2025, Xponential generated $314.9 million in revenue, a 2% decrease from the prior year. Turning to the components that make up revenue. Franchise revenue for the quarter was $51.5 million, up 14% year-over-year. This growth was primarily driven by higher franchise territory revenue, reflecting accelerated license revenue as we continue to resolve delinquent franchise licenses. Equipment revenue was $7 million, declining by 45% year-over-year. This decrease was primarily the result of a lower volume of installations in the period compared to the same period prior year. Merchandise revenue of $7.2 million was up 18% year-over-year. The increase year-over-year was due to favorable retail sales and the benefits of the outsourced retail operation that occurred in the fourth quarter. Franchise marketing fund revenue of $8.9 million was down 3% year-over-year, primarily due to lower system-wide sales stemming from divested brands. Lastly, other service revenue, which includes sales generated from rebates from processing studio system-wide sales, brand access partnerships, company-owned studios, XPASS and XPLUS amongst other items, was $8.3 million, down 16% from the prior year period. The decline in the period was primarily due to lower sponsorship revenues from our preferred suppliers, which offsets the cost of holding our annual franchise conference. Turning to our operating expenses for the quarter. Cost of product revenue were $9.7 million, down 29% year-over-year. The decrease was primarily driven by the lower volume of equipment installations. Cost of franchise and service revenue were $7.2 million, up 19% year-over-year. The increase in franchise sales commission was driven primarily by the termination of franchise licenses, which results in the immediate acceleration in commission expense recognition. Selling, general and administrative expenses were $57.7 million for the quarter, up 1% year-over-year. In 2025, we have entered into and paid lease settlement agreements of approximately $33.5 million. As of December 31, 2025, we have approximately $9.1 million of lease liabilities yet to be settled. We expect most of the remaining liabilities will be settled during the remainder of this year. Importantly, we have an update in connection with the pending FTC investigation. Earlier this week, FTC staff indicated they will recommend that the FTC commissioners approve a proposed stipulated consent order to fully resolve all of the FTC's alleged claims against the company. As part of that proposed consent order and without the admission of liability, the company has agreed to pay $17 million over the next 12 months. The settlement remains subject to the approval of the FTC commissioners and the court. We believe resolution of this matter will resolve a meaningful amount of uncertainty for all our stakeholders. Depreciation and amortization expense was $2.4 million, down 47% compared to the prior year period. Marketing fund expenses were $13.3 million, up 126% year-over-year. This increase was expected and primarily driven by a higher spend afforded by the increase in system-wide sales and as part of the increased planned spend for Club Pilates. As Mike mentioned, top-of-funnel lead generation is critically important for the company. The increased spend this quarter was purposely deployed to gain insights on the effectiveness of various marketing strategies. Acquisition and transaction expenses were $0.5 million, down from $1.9 million in the prior year period. As I have noted on prior earnings calls, this includes the contingent consideration activity, which is related to the Rumble acquisition earn-out and is driven by the share price at quarter end. We mark-to-market the earnout each quarter and accrue for the earn-out. Note that this earn-out will persist despite the recent divestiture of the brand. We recorded a net loss of $45.6 million in the fourth quarter or a loss of $1.17 per basic share compared to a net loss of $62.5 million or a loss of $1.36 per basic share in the prior year period. For 2025, we recorded a net loss of $53.7 million or a loss of $1.47 per basic share compared to a net loss of $98.7 million or a loss of $2.27 per basic share in the prior year period. We continue to believe that adjusted net income is a more useful way to measure the performance of our business. A reconciliation of net income and loss to adjusted net income and loss is provided in our earnings press release. Adjusted net loss for the fourth quarter was $44.6 million or adjusted net loss of $0.91 per basic share on a share count of 35.2 million shares of Class A common stock. For 2025, adjusted net loss was $18.4 million or adjusted net loss of $0.49 per basic share on a share count of 34.8 million shares of Class A common stock. Adjusted EBITDA was $22.9 million in the fourth quarter, down 26% compared to $30.8 million in the prior year period. The adjusted EBITDA margin was 28% in the fourth quarter, down from 37% in the prior year period. The primary items in the period that contributed to the lower EBITDA margin include higher marketing fund expenses that exceeded marketing fund income and lower sponsorship revenues from our annual franchise conference. For 2025, our adjusted EBITDA was $111.8 million, down 4% compared to $116.2 million in 2024. I'd now like to provide a comprehensive summary of our annual results that include more granular brand level metrics and the data for our 5 brands: Club Pilates, Pure Barre, StretchLab, YogaSix and BFT. As stated in previous years, this additional information is only provided on our fourth quarter conference call. In 2025, the strongest license sales occurred at Club Pilates with 140 and BFT with 24. Club Pilates alone represented 78% of the 179 licenses sold this year. Most license sales, 63% occurred internationally with the remaining 37% sold in North America. For gross openings, Club Pilates led with 220, followed by StretchLab with 48 and BFT with 36, together representing 89% of the 341 gross new studio openings this year. Gross new studio openings mostly occurred in North America at 74% with the balance of 26% occurring internationally. Over time, international operations are anticipated to become a greater percentage of the total gross new studio openings. System-wide sales are driven directionally by the number of North American studios operating and the maturity of those studios. It is expected that the brands with a growing number of studios will continue to generate higher proportions of our system-wide sales as AUVs increase. Club Pilates with 1,241 studios operating at year-end in North America contributed 65% of our total system-wide sales for the year. Pure Barre with 624 and StretchLab with 503 studios operating, both contributed approximately 14%, respectively. Overall run rate average unit volumes decreased 2% to $683,000 at year-end. StretchLab AUV decreased 12% year-over-year to $483,000 and Club Pilates AUV decreased 6% year-over-year to $966,000. Meanwhile, Pure Barre AUV increased 3% year-over-year to $400,000 and YogaSix AUV increased 12% year-over-year to $525,000. Same-store sales across the portfolio were up 0.5% for the full year, with Club Pilates at 3%, continuing to overinfluence performance due to its scale. Within the other brands, YogaSix and Pure Barre had same-store sales of 2% and 4%, respectively, for the full year, while StretchLab was negative 12%. Turning to the balance sheet. As of December 31, 2025, cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash were $45.9 million, up from $32.7 million as of December 31, 2024. In 2025, the company's cash position increased by $13.1 million. For the year, net cash provided by operating activities was $28.3 million. Net cash provided by investing activities was $1.5 million and net cash used in financing activities was $16.7 million. In December 2025, we took a significant step to strengthen our capital structure and support long-term shareholder value by entering into a new 5-year $525 million term loan and putting in place a $25 million revolving credit facility. A key aspect of this refinancing was the full repurchase of all outstanding convertible preferred stock, eliminating approximately 8.1 million potential common shares and simplifying our equity base. By refinancing the existing debt and retiring the convertible preferred security, we have reduced refinancing risk, improved financial flexibility and removed a source of dilution for existing shareholders. This action reinforces our commitment to disciplined capital management and positions the company to better support strategic priorities going forward. Total long-term debt was $525 million as of December 31, 2025, compared to $352.4 million as of December 31, 2024. The increase in total long-term debt is primarily due to retiring the convertible preferred security previously mentioned. As the company continues to generate cash, we expect for deleveraging to occur over the coming years. Let's now discuss our outlook for 2026. Based on current business conditions and our expectations as of the date of this call, we are issuing the following guidance for global net new studio openings, system-wide sales, total revenue and adjusted EBITDA for the current year as follows. We expect 2026 global net new studio openings, which is net of closures to be in the range of 150 to 170, representing a 20% decrease at the midpoint from the prior year pro forma for brand dispositions. We expect the number of closures to be 3% to 5% of the global system this year as a percentage of total open studios with a longer focus to reduce global closures to low single digits as a percentage of the total global system. We project North America system-wide sales to range from $1.72 billion to $1.8 billion, representing a 1% increase at the midpoint from the prior year pro forma for brand dispositions. Total 2026 revenue is expected to be between $260 million to $270 million, representing a 16% decrease year-over-year at the midpoint of our guided range. The year-over-year change is roughly driven by an approximately $23.1 million revenue impact from 2025 divested brands and approximately $18 million revenue impact from the shift to an outsourced merchandise sales model. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to range from $100 million to $110 million, representing a 6% decrease year-over-year at the midpoint of our guided range. This range translates into an approximately 40% adjusted EBITDA margin at the midpoint. The relatively flat year-over-year forecast is driven by an approximately $5.6 million net benefit from divested brands, which is gross margin upside offset by cost savings and overall lower SG&A, primarily from our prior year cost reductions and the net benefit from our new outsourced retail arrangement, offset by lower studio same-store sales, which we expect to trend in the negative low single-digit range for 2026. We expect total SG&A to range from $108 million to $113 million. When further excluding the onetime lease restructuring charges and regulatory legal defense expenses, we are expecting SG&A of $97 million to $102 million and a range of $85 million to $90 million when further excluding stock-based costs. In terms of capital expenditure, we anticipate approximately $6 million to $10 million for the year or approximately 3% of revenue at the midpoint. Going forward, capital expenditure will primarily focus on our data transformation initiative, website and mobile applications, learning management system and general technology investments. For the full year 2026, our tax rate is expected to be mid- to high single digit and share count for purposes of earnings per share calculation to be 37.3 million. A full explanation of our share count calculation and associated pro forma EPS and adjusted EPS calculation can be found in the tables at the end of our earnings press release as well as our corporate structure and capitalization FAQ on our investor website. We anticipate our non-GAAP unlevered free cash flow conversion to be approximately 90% of adjusted EBITDA as we require minimal capital expenditure to grow the business. We expect that our anticipated interest expense in 2026 will be approximately $55 million, tax expenses to be approximately $4 million, including the cash usage for tax receivable agreement and tax distributions to pre-IPO LLC members, resulting in levered adjusted EBITDA cash flow conversion at the midpoint of approximately 35%. As Mike mentioned at the beginning of the call, we are happy with the progress we have made on several fronts in the past year. We have invested and will continue to invest in all the necessary initiatives expected to drive sustainable financial performance and long-term growth of our brands. This concludes today's prepared remarks. Thank you all for your time today. We will now open the call for questions. Operator?