Thank you, Sam. Constant, sustained, intensive training, teaching, coaching, inspiring and encouraging. These are the clearly stated behaviors that make up the prescription for success for broadcasters in the digital space. Saga has spent the better part of 2.5 years doing just that with our general managers, sales managers, media advisers, content creators in all of our 27 markets. And it has been challenging, to be honest. Recently, I spoke with 16 of our Saga general managers. That's about half of all of our Saga general managers in total. And during that discussion, I conducted a quick survey. I asked the question, how long have each of you been in the broadcast business? Each of the 16 leaders gave their answer, and I then tallied the totals and discovered that the leaders in just those 16 Saga markets had been in the business we love for a total of 594 years. 594 years of acquired skills, knowledge, expertise, intuition, instincts, acumen and other skills and abilities. Traditionally, radio professionals have been very successful and have made a lot of money for their organizations and for themselves over the years on just 5% to 7% of the total ad spend. Parenthetically, 5% to 7% has been radio share of the total advertising pie for some time and has now settled in at about 5%. And now with the digital age, there seems to be an element of fear to change or maybe a fear of loss on the part of broadcasters. But times have changed. Thus what Saga and other broadcasters have been aggressively doing is to expand the knowledge base. In Saga's case, expand the knowledge base in the 594 collective years of acquired skills, knowledge, expertise, intuition, instincts, acumen and finally, success. This, while at the same time, continuing to blunt the onslaught of a macro downdraft in the traditional advertising sector. That's a tall order, and we're progressing on getting it done. In essence, we have been remodeling a home while we're still living in the home. If any of you have ever done that, you know it's rather disruptive. And in this case, old habits die hard. And in the digital space, it can be confusing and alluring with all the new bright shiny options that exist. Thus, it is also critical for us as leaders and operators to avoid the urge to focus or try to focus on too much. As I have said on previous earnings calls, we chose this path of transformational change at a desire for growth and out of necessity. We believe and have seen evidence of it that a local digital advertising market that remains is ripe for disruption. Here's what we see. I've shared some of this with you before. There's an ongoing increase in digital advertising dollars and the rapid growth of digital budgets has outpaced the ability of the advertisers to use them effectively. There are frustrated buyers with unmet needs. The ineffective evergreen, as we call it, set it and forget it campaigns and empty promises create a lack of trust with what the advertiser is buying and with who they are buying it from. There are too many providers and too many conflicting solutions. Everybody's got a new and bright shiny answer. So buyers are confused. Thus our media advisers must be properly trained and equipped with the right resources so they can then provide the clarity and simplicity to help our customers be successful. And finally, many of the digital offerings out there focus too much on the products and not enough on the real journey the consumer goes on once they engage with a product or service. To be clear, Saga is a customer-first company, not a digital-first company. We are a customer first, not a digital-first company. Our blended process honors and respects and grows local radio and allows Saga's core business to do the magic it has always been known for. Radio gets the advertiser wanted and always, always leads to a search. Search gets the advertiser found and display gets the advertiser chosen. In concept, it's simple. Saga's blended digital process is easy to understand, easy to buy, easy to execute, easy to measure and ultimately easy to rebuy. So now it comes back to the feet of leadership. And it is our job to make enough of the right blended sales calls saying the right things to the right people with frequency. So to assist with these objectives, we've deployed a lead gen solution to help Saga's media advisers and media groups get wanted found and chosen. You noticed I said to help Saga's media advisers and media groups get wanted found and chosen. In essence, we are applying the blended strategy to our own enterprise. Practice what we've preached. And now after a couple of years of training, conversations we're having are much different than they ever were 2 years ago. Our leaders continue to put in the work and they are becoming experts. We believe they have learned and know more about consumer behavior and digital advertising than they ever even realize. The other day, one of our leaders said to me, it's more important to get it right than it is to be right, and we are beginning to get it right. And in the process of getting it right and in our quest to catch up with our broadcast brethren after being late to the digital party and attempting to forge a path no one has ever forged before successfully, we may have, may have made some of the training and coaching and inspiring and encouraging a bit too complicated and perhaps tried to focus on a little too much with those leaders with the 594-plus collective years of broadcast experience. These leaders who are then charged with teaching, coaching, inspiring and encouraging others in their organization to go out and tell the story to the consumers and to our customers so they can benefit from the story itself. So with us, clarity and simplicity also applies. It applies to us during our training process. So going forward, we've shifted slightly to not ignore or forego the traditional radio and radio advertising that has served so many in the Saga verse for so long and to ignore it just because it's not blended or doesn't include search and display. Every conversation, every interaction with an advertiser is another opportunity to have a blended conversation that could lead to a sale and success for our customer. We are and will continue to sell e-comm, online news, endorsements, promotions, events and create impeccable spec creative, be great storytellers who tell persuasive stories that allow the customer to see themselves in that story, be intense and curious listeners that help our customers solve problems and use those 594 years of experience gained by our leaders to accomplish this. Now all of that being said, at a time when traditional advertising is extremely challenging and some broadcasters are looking to divest partially or completely and cut expenses or perhaps hang on just long enough for deregulation to become a thing. Saga with the support of management and the Board of Directors continues to invest in the ongoing training and resources and people power necessary to acquire, retain and grow our revenue. And we continue to see green sprouts of success as we remodel the house that we're currently living in. And now speed of execution is what we need. When I got into the business, we called it wearing out your shoe leather. I don't think you call it that anymore. That's what we call it then. These are some of the green sprouts we're seeing. For example, Saga's digital-only blended revenue was up over $1 million, a 103% increase year-over-year Q1 2025 versus Q1 2026. Local direct revenue that was attached to a blended product, the blended products being search and display was up year-over-year Q1 2025 versus Q1 2026, 29%. The average blended local direct radio buy is 70% larger than the average non-blended local direct radio buy. The average total blended buy per client is 3x larger than the average non-blended local radio buy. Year-over-year Q1 2025 versus Q1 2026, we gained 158 blended accounts and lost 419 accounts. So significant attrition is real. Let me say that again, we gained 158 blended accounts and lost 419 non-blended accounts. Attrition is real. And revenue from blended and digital -- excuse me, revenue from blended digital and radio together in Q1 2026 was $3.6 million and was up $1.3 million over Q1 2025. If you do the math, that was up 59% year-over-year quarter-over-quarter. Unfortunately, as Sam mentioned, even with the lift in blended performance, which consists primarily of search and display, we did not yet offset the delta in overall performance for the 3 months ending 3/31/26. Saga finished down 6% in total gross revenue and down 5.6% in total net revenue. As forecasted, digital expenses over the same period increased $649,000 due to the addition of digital people, training, digital products, resources for several of our Saga markets. This investment in infrastructure and people will ultimately enable us to bring several outsourced products in-house to allow us to increase Saga's operating margins on many of the digital products we offer. And during this transition, however, there will be a brief overlap in time where we will be training in-house employees and continuing to use third-party providers and we'll be doing it simultaneously, training and then deploying. This, along with the increase in general digital expenses will not be for any means a long-term proposition. We need these short-term investments in order to compete in an extremely competitive and ever-changing digital marketplace. There will certainly be a ramp-up period for those -- for that revenue to catch up and surpass the expense lift. And we anticipate this crossover period to take place in the third and early fourth quarters of 2026. At that point, our plan is that the investments made will become accretive. As far as Saga's other terribly important revenue initiatives are concerned and ones that we've talked about on virtually every earnings call, for the quarter ending March 31, 2026, local e-commerce revenue was up 23.2%. And looking ahead, April e-commerce registered a record month of $347,000. And January through April, e-commerce is performing up 24% year-over-year for the 4-month period. And the 12-month trailing revenue on e-com platform is nearly $3 million. The vest of digital program was up 15% year-over-year for Q1 2025 (sic) [ 2026]. However, national streaming revenue during the period ending 3/31/26 was down 31.5%. This was due primarily to a change in third-party provider processes and a change in algorithms. Mobile streaming was up 116% and local streaming revenue was down 7%. Online news sites were also down for the quarter, 7.2%. Despite this decline in national streaming, local streaming and the online news, Saga experienced a large lift in overall digital revenue. All in, interactive digital revenue for the period ending 3/31/26, as Sam mentioned, was up 25.2%. More specifically, SEM and search was up 105% year-over-year quarter-over-quarter. Targeted display was up 120% year-over-year, quarter-over-quarter, and social media was up 108% year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter. So in closing, the reach and frequency and intrusive magic of radio, along with search and display, coupled with hundreds of years of experience from Saga's broadcasters, bring the best of all worlds together and engage and enable us to change with the times. It enables us to honor the past and guide the future. That's how we move from simply changing with the times to leading through them together. Thank you again for your time, your interest and support of Saga Communications, what we believe to be the best media company on the planet. Sam, are there any questions?