Thanks, Brian, and thank you all for joining our call tonight. I'd like to break my remarks into three areas. First, I want to close out our year-end results. Secondly, you may have seen in our outlook that we're beginning to issue annual guidance for the first time and I want to focus the majority of my remarks on our plan to return to growth this fiscal year versus only focusing on a single quarter. And finally, I want to provide some commentary and updates on how we're positioned to profitably grow well beyond just this fiscal year. To close out fiscal '24, we achieved $545 million of revenue, $92 million of EBITDA and $0.58 of non-GAAP earnings per share. In addition to the numbers and despite a challenging operating environment, I'm proud of the team and specifically the notable progress we made on numerous investment activities that set us up for the future, including our progress on our new version of Ignite, our migration to our new hosting platform, our launch of SDK Bidding and many new back-end corporate systems consolidated and launched. We've also seen a number of tailwinds emerge that I'll discuss later in my remarks that will be catalyst for our return to growth. But we also continue to navigate a few short-term headwinds that are persistent in our very near-term results. Specifically, US device sales continue to be challenging. As some US operators have publicly reported, postpaid upgrade rates were approximately 3% of the base for the March quarter or a run rate of 12% per year. This would imply more than an eight-year upgrade cycle, which I think all of us would recognize as unsustainable for the long-term, but it is a reality in the present. Exacerbating this trend were fewer software updates on the in-life devices, which reduced monetization opportunities. The other headwind is our ability to distribute Chinese nongaming applications here in the United States. We're working aggressively and pivoting these spends to other international markets. But nevertheless, it does impact revenue here in the US market but our spend from nongaming Chinese companies has decreased by approximately $20 million from fiscal '23 to fiscal '24 despite those companies wanting to spend more on our US supply. Our number one priority is returning the business to growth. And in order to do that, there are three growth drivers. First is growing our device footprint. As mentioned in our earnings press release, we anticipate an incremental 70 plus million devices launching with various Ignite capabilities. Including in this number is expanding our relationship with Motorola that is both exclusive to Digital Turbine and it's also global, including on all operators here in the United States. Motorola has been shipping between 40 million to 50 million devices over the past few years and are one of the few OEMs showing positive growth. Their shipments roughly approximate to the amount of postpaid devices that all the US operators combined are selling. In other words, this is a positive material development for us. It is early days, but we are also live with ONE Store in Korea that will ultimately add tens of millions more devices with SingleTap capability. Our pipeline remains extremely robust as we are seeing many global operators and OEMs wanting to work with us, and we look forward to sharing more device supply opportunities in the future. In addition to these wins, we've heard some recent encouraging reports from chipset suppliers on future device volumes, which tend to be lead indicators for future demand as well as the anniversarying of the two to three year lease plans later this year offered by US operators. Thus, we are hopeful for better trends here in the US into the future, but for now it's a major headwind and is reflected in our forecast. But returning to growth through new devices on new partners plus existing partners showing momentum are the keys to our first growth driver. Our second growth driver is expanding our product portfolio for both our ODS and AGP businesses. Scaling new ad tech and on-device capabilities are critical to our return to growth. On our AGP business, as we've mentioned on prior calls, the last couple of years have been focused on investments and consolidating our ad tech assets into a common platform. That's now largely complete and ready to bear fruit. A specific example of this is our exchange, which we brand as the Digital Turbine Exchange, or DTX, which we have now been fully consolidated from our legacy Fyber and AdColony acquisitions. We believe we're uniquely positioned in mobile with the acquisitions to differentiate with brand dollars to our publishers versus our competitors that are more focused on performance dollars. And conversely, many advertisers spending on brand have not been as focused on mobile, but other channels such as CTV or retail media. So we believe the combination of our mobile expertise, access to first-party data, product capabilities such as SingleTap and our agency brand relationships and creative capabilities, drive attention for advertiser audiences is something that we believe is going to allow us to win. And the early returns are encouraging. Our brand revenues for the March quarter were up 15% from the March quarter of last year. We're also now over one-third of our revenues on our DT Exchange coming from SDK Bidding, which is a requirement for many brands and agencies in how they bid for audiences. And this allows us to grow our revenues, not just with direct brand, but also with brand omni DSPs like The Trade Desk and Google DV360. Our other AGP product growth driver will be increasing our share of voice for leveraging our first-party data and our Ignite capabilities via bidding. We do this today through our Appreciate DSP acquisition, which is starting to show renewed growth. Our AI and machine learning enhancements to our new DSP, which we brand as DT Direct, will allow us to improve our bidding on our own supply, allowing us to optimize our own demand over our own supply. We also look to partner with third-party DSPs that can help us grow our share of voice. And this all translates not just into top line revenue growth with more demand dollars, but is also key in driving the flywheel effects of improving revenues on our other products such as SingleTap, our DT Exchange and FairBid, our mediation product. Our primary growth drivers on our ODS business are SingleTap alternative apps and better leveraging our first-party data for our existing ODS products. SingleTap continues to add more devices, more advertisers and have better execution. It's early days for alternative app distribution approach. But as we've discussed on prior calls, we will look to begin showing our progress of distribution, not just on Android and Apple iOS but also alternative app versions. The interest from large Tier 1 publishers is encouraging, it will be a growth driver for us this year. And finally, we've historically been focused on leveraging our distribution footprint to drive ODS revenue. We've not optimized our first-party data. We are beginning to do a better job here and see an increased interest from our supply partners to also leverage these insights to help advertisers drive better outcomes. And our third growth driver is our media relationships. We are continuing to expand directly with brands such as Apple, Amazon, Starbucks, P&G and many others as well as their advertising agencies that are driving 15% plus annual growth. In particular, I'm pleased to announce that GroupM who is the largest media buying agency in the world under the WPP umbrella, has included us as the only global preferred partner for mobile. This materially expands our addressable market for ad dollars as GroupM manages over $50 billion of media buying and our competition in mobile will not have access to this brand inventory. And as things like cookie deprecation happen in Chrome, it will showcase our mobile app inventory as more attractive offerings to brands than other omni SSPs that have been relying upon these identifiers and other ad channels. We anticipate that our GroupM relationship will unlock media dollars from well-known brands. And we also continue to have many strategic relationships with large global game publishers. And with the tailwind of alternative app distribution, these players are increasingly attracted to Digital Turbine to develop deeper relationships. And the final media growth driver is our change in channel strategy to grow revenue per device outside the United States. Our current distribution approach is optimized to drive stronger RPDs on US supply. And the positive results we've talked about on prior calls of doubling RPDs over the past few years as a result of this. However, that's been at the expense of better execution of working with channel partners who can bring more media dollars to our international device footprint. This is a controllable and a major focus area for us. To summarize, our number one priority this fiscal year is returning our business to growth with three main growth drivers. The first is expanding our device footprint. The second is growth from new products such as SingleTap, DTX, alt app stores and so on. And the third is expanding our media relationships, whether that's via new relationships with behemoths like GroupM expanding our brand dollars with brand buyers like The Trade Desk and Google or other gaming strategic partners looking to expand their mobile gaming audiences. And beyond this fiscal year, the goal is not just to return to growth but accelerate it. The key driver here will be the expansion of our alternative app strategy. We've launched our first alternative app distribution products, which we brand as DT Hub with five operators here in the United States. We're leveraging our Aptoide investment and are generating revenue today. We've also taken a minority interest in Flexion so we can improve our partnership on building great alternative app experiences as Flexion is a leading porting source for many alternative stores such as Amazon, Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi and many others. And finally, we've also taken an equity stake in ONE Store. And as I mentioned earlier, we've just launched SingleTap on devices in Korea this month. This launch has three benefits: One is it will allow us to leverage our DSP to friction-free app downloads of alternative app versions to Korean customers. And second is a way for us to expand scale of developed market supply versus being constrained with the issues I mentioned here in the US. And finally we'll look to enhance our partnership with ONE Store into the future outside of Korea and combined with our Aptoide and Flexion relationships, we've got the building blocks to be a dominant force in the alternative app market. And as a reminder for investors, the Digital Markets Act, or DMA, launched in March in the EU, and we would encourage investors to pay very close attention to the details around this such as how the regulators manage Apple compliance and the corresponding opportunities that will present for us. I also want to emphasize that the alternative app strategy is not just about new in-app payment revenues, but perhaps more importantly, to be the catalyst to accelerate our existing lines of businesses beyond this fiscal year. Today, approximately 50% of our business is driven by user acquisition and 50% is driven by in-app advertising. Our app providers want to find ways to acquire more users at a lower cost with alternative users and we believe that this will also open up new app providers to leverage our ad tech stack as part of this strategy, thereby driving more AGP revenue growth. We're live today running both alternative app user acquisition campaigns and in-app advertising, leveraging our technology into the current result. In other words, improving our present revenues and cash flow are both closely linked to the future strategy. And a key to all this will be the leadership to make it happen. I'm pleased to announce that Michael Ackerman will be joining our team as the Chief Business Officer effective June 3rd, reporting to me. Michael is joining us from Uber, where he's the General Manager of advertising across Uber's various businesses. And before that, Michael had executive roles at Pinterest and Cardlytics. I'm excited to have Michael's nice blend of functional skills in product, marketing and sales, but perhaps even more excited with his global background and cultural fit with ours. Michael's primary responsibility will be the lead executive returning our business to growth. And in conclusion, we've seen some nice tailwinds in our business that should be catalyst returning our business to growth later this year with many specific drivers from devices, products, media partners and cost optimization activities that are all in flight to accomplish this year. Those are the things that are going to return Digital Turbine to a growth company in the short term, while we continue to preserve our very bright long-term vision. And with that concludes my prepared remarks, and I'll take it over to Barrett to take you through the numbers.