Thanks, Scott, and good morning, everyone. Before we begin, I want to acknowledge the devastation caused by the recent hurricanes in the Eastern United States. Hurricanes Helene and Milton have had a significant impact on so many, and I'm proud of the way the American Airlines team has stepped up to help. We had a 1,000 seats into and out of the impacted areas and cap fares for customers traveling to get out of the path of the hurricanes. Additionally, our cargo team has moved more than 8 tons of critical supplies to impacted regions, and our team and advantage members have donated more than $5 million to the American Red Cross to help out those impacted by Helene, Milton, and other significant weather events this year. Our thoughts are with the communities that's affected by these disasters, and we'll continue to support recovery efforts. Now to the results. Today, American reported a third quarter adjusted pretax profit of $271 million. This earnings result is higher than our guidance issued in July, with third quarter adjusted earnings per diluted share of $0.30. I'm especially proud of this result given the operational challenges the team faced in the quarter, most notably, the impact of hurricanes Debbie and Helene and the CrowdStrike outage. The estimated net impact of these disruptions reduced our third quarter earnings by approximately $90 million or $0.12 per diluted share. Our remarks this morning will focus on our revenue performance, operational reliability, and cost execution in the third quarter. Notably, we hit or exceeded our prior guidance on every financial metric in the quarter, while also running a reliable operation. We're intently focused on delivering on our commitments. In this quarter, we did just that. On to our third quarter revenue performance. TRASM was down 2% in the quarter, 1.5 points better than the midpoint of our prior guidance. This improvement in the quarter was primarily driven by the steps we've taken to adjust domestic and short haul international capacity, which helped improve the balance of supply and demand. Domestic PRASM was down 3.1% year-over-year with performance improving through the quarter as industry capacity growth decelerated from July. Importantly, flown yields in September were positive year-over-year and we were able to narrow the competitive load factor gap we saw in the third quarter of last year. Long-haul international continued to perform well in the third quarter, with positive year-over-year unit revenue growth driven by strength in the Atlantic and South America. While short-haul Latin RASM was negative for the quarter, the region drove the largest sequential improvement from the second quarter to the third quarter, driven by the improving industry supply backdrop. Demand for Americans product remains strong as evidenced by the continued strength of our business, premium, and loyalty revenue performance. Managed business revenue was up 6% year-over-year and we continue to see yield strength in the segment. Premium revenue increased by approximately 8% year-over-year on 3% more capacity. Paid load factor in our premium cabins remains historically high and was up more than 4 points year-over-year with strength in both domestic and international. Loyalty revenues were up approximately 5% year-over-year, with AAdvantage members responsible for 72% of premium cabin revenue. Spending on our co-branded credit cards was up approximately 7% year-over-year in the third quarter, highlighting the value of American's loyalty program today and moving forward. In July, we committed to report on progress in regaining our share of revenue lost as a result of our prior sales and distribution strategy. We know success ultimately will be measured by improved revenue and earnings. In the near term, we're tracking our progress by measuring our agency and corporate booking performance, tracking the growth of our new AAdvantage Business Program, and listening to the feedback from our agency partners and corporate customers. Our third quarter indirect flown revenue share improved modestly compared with our performance in the second quarter. However, the booking trajectory through the quarter is encouraging. American's corporate and agency flown revenue share bottomed at 11% below our historical share. Since then, our share of indirect bookings has started to recover, and we estimate we are currently at 7% below historical levels, and we expect to see continued improvement in the months ahead. In the third quarter, we continued negotiations for new incentive based agreements with the largest TMCs and agencies. We now have new competitive agreements in place with more than half of those and are in advanced negotiations with the rest. We rebuilt our agency support capability and based on the team's NPS scores, they're providing world class service. These agreements combined with the support enhancements are major steps towards restoring our share in these important distribution channels. In September, we announced the relaunch of our corporate experience program to address feedback from our corporate customers. The program provides meaningful benefits including priority boarding, access to preferred seats, and priority re-accommodations during disruptions. Additionally, we have amended agreements with many of our top corporate customers. Adoption of AAdvantage Business, our program tailored for small and medium sized businesses, continued to build during the quarter. Our actions to expand the benefits, which include bookings through agencies, enhanced program support, and a more simplified enrolment process are clearly working. We expect to accelerate the growth of the program going forward. Concurrently, we've been engaged with our corporate and agency partners to ensure we're addressing the issues that matter most to our customers. We've heard universally that their worlds are better with three airlines rather than two, because of the network and travel rewards program that America delivers. Based on this feedback, we're confident we're taking the right actions. We know full restoration of our revenue will take some time, but with the progress we're seeing and the actions underway, we aim to fully restore our revenue from indirect channels as we exit 2025. We will continue our relentless focus on reestablishing relationships with our business customers, reembracing the agency channel, and making it easier to do business with American. Now turning to our operations. The American Airlines team delivered strong operational results in the third quarter, including outperforming our network peers over the peak summer travel period. These results were accomplished despite extended periods of difficult weather in several key hubs and continued supply chain challenges. Despite these obstacles, American led the U.S. network carriers in completion factor in the third quarter. This is a testament to our team's ability to plan and deliver a safe, reliable and consistent product for our customers. Earlier, I mentioned the financial impact of the CrowdStrike outage and hurricanes Debbie and Helene. The cost of those disruptions could have been far greater, if not for our team's quick recovery, which was a result of our focus and investment in the resiliency of our operation. As we closed the quarter in September and have transitioned into the fall, we're seeing some of the best operational performance of the year. And as promised at our Investor Day, American is delivering strong operational results. And moving forward, we expect to produce the same operational reliability even more efficiently. Now I'll turn it over to Devon to share more about our third quarter financial results and the fourth quarter outlook.