Thanks, Lyle, and good afternoon, everyone. I will provide details of the quarter and some forward-looking views. Please remember, this commentary is subject to the risks and uncertainties associated with forward-looking statements as discussed in our filings with the SEC. For the third quarter, we generated sales of $325.7 million, which was 2.2% higher than last year. On a comparable restaurant basis, Q3 sales increased by 1.7%. Our sales driving initiatives worked to grow sales, traffic and market-share in the third quarter. Our comp sales growth was driven by 1.3% traffic growth, which was our best traffic quarter since 2018 when excluding the COVID recovery quarters. In Q3, compared to the casual dining industry as measured by Black Box, our comp sales beat the industry by 3.1 percentage points and our traffic beat by 5.7 percentage points. Our traffic outperformance was driven in-part by value programs such as the Pizookie Pass that launched in late June and the Pizookie Meal Deal that launched in September, as well as an initiative to expand loyalty program membership and usage. These programs, particularly the Pizookie Pass and loyalty expansion, impacted our sales leverage in the third quarter. We also built guest excitement around limited time offerings such as our [Seymour Suziki] (ph) and the Lucky Ducky cocktail. Comp sales built through the quarter with our September comp of 3.8%, demonstrating the momentum building behind our Pizookie Meal Deal weekday promotion that launched in the second week of September. Our restaurant level cash-flow margin was 11.7% in Q3, which was 20 basis points less than a year-ago. We did not fully leverage our strong traffic growth as higher than anticipated restaurant costs, which we are addressing resulted in lower restaurant level operating margin percentage. Our restaurant level operating profit was $38 million in Q3, which was $200,000 higher than a year ago as our higher sales drove slightly more restaurant dollar profits. Adjusted EBITDA was $18.5 million and 5.7% of sales in the third quarter. Q3 EBITDA was $1.1 million lower than last year, driven by higher G&A. The main year-over-year G&A variance was higher deferred compensation expense, which is a non-cash item and fully offset in other income. To note, approximately $1.7 million of net expenses incurred related to our leadership transition are added back to our Q3 adjusted EBITDA. We reported a net loss of $2.9 million and diluted net loss per share of $0.13 on a GAAP basis for the quarter, which were both better than a year-ago. Note, that the Q3 net loss includes a $400,000 pre-tax or $0.02 per share net leadership transition benefit, which is a combination of the $1.7 million net expenses added back to EBITDA and a $2.1 million stock-compensation credit. For more detail on restaurant expenses, our cost of sales was 26.6% in the quarter, which was 70 basis points unfavorable compared to a year ago. Traffic driving initiatives, mainly the Pizookie Pass and the loyalty program expansion weighed on percent margins. As Lyle mentioned, the popularity of our Pizookie Pass promotion exceeded our expectations and created margin compression. Food cost inflation was approximately 3% year-over-year, which was offset by menu pricing. Cost increased for certain key items in Q3, including avocados, ground beef and bone-in wings, which are items we purchased at-market. In October, costs for all three items trended down and are now either back to or below Q2 levels. Labor and benefits expenses were 37.1% of sales in the quarter, consistent with the third quarter of last year. Along with guest traffic, our new promotions added complexity, which reduced our labor efficiency in the quarter and we did not leverage labor to our full potential. We staffed our restaurants to deliver strong sales and traffic growth in the third quarter. Now with improved top-line trends, we are actively refining our labor model to better leverage the high sales. Occupancy and operating expenses were 24.7% of sales in the quarter, which was 40 basis-points favorable compared to the third quarter of last year. We continue to achieve strong efficiency gains over the prior year from our cost-savings initiatives and leverage from higher sales. G&A was $21 million in the third quarter. Included in G&A was a $700,000 expense linked to market-based performance of our deferred compensation plan compared with a $100,000 benefit last year. The $800,000 increase in our deferred comp expense equates to approximately 25 basis-points of sales. As a reminder, this is a non-cash item and is offset in other income and expenses in our P&L. During the quarter, we repurchased and retired approximately 268,000 shares of our common stock at a cost of $8.2 million. We currently have approximately $44 million available under our share repurchase program. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the third quarter with net-debt of $48.1 million comprised of a debt balance of $66.5 million plus cash and equivalents of $18.4 million. This equates to net-debt of $800,000 higher than our balance at the end of Q2. Value is as important as ever to guest in the current environment. Given the consumer backdrop, we adapted our menu strategy by quickly moving to design, test and launch a comprehensive new value program in the Pizookie Meal Deal, a compelling traffic-driving deal with attractive economics given the food cost profile and weekday timing. We supported the launch with call to action messaging, including media in certain markets to build the initial awareness and drive trial. Additionally, more guests than ever are enjoying Pizookies, which is a brand differentiator for BJ's. Since launching the Pizookie Meal Deal in the second week of September, our weekly comp sales results have beaten Black box by approximately 500 basis-points on average. For the first four weeks of the fourth quarter, our comparable restaurant sales are up more than 4%. Our value message is now focused on our $13 Pizookie Meal Deal available Monday through Friday, which continues to drive sales and profits across the dayparts. We are now past the impact of our Pizookie Pass promotion and our loyalty expansion and continue to deliver sales and traffic well-ahead of the industry. As we've said before, dollar profit growth is our top success criteria for any promotion. We are encouraged by the incremental profit flow-through of our Pizookie Meal Deal, especially given the incremental weekday traffic it is driving into our restaurants. Given our current promotional mix, along with more favorable commodity market environment and a 90 basis-point menu pricing round in late September, our cost-of-sales has recently trended in the 26% area or approximately 60 basis-points better than Q3. October is the final full month of our Pizookie Pass promotion. Our focus has shifted to the Pizookie Meal Deal, which is driving strong sales and traffic during weekdays and has a food cost profile more similar to our regular menu. In terms of margin improvement initiatives, we continue to work with our restaurant teams to identify and realize labor efficiency opportunities overall and in the context of executing our traffic driving initiatives. Also, we completed the rollout of a specialized disposables distributor in Q3 and will begin to realize the full savings in the fourth quarter. Taking into account recent sales and cost trends as well as our promotional mix and continued margin improvement initiatives, we expect restaurant-level margins to be in the mid to high 14% range in the fourth quarter. This percent margin is lower than our expectations from earlier this year, but our recent sales trends are higher than our prior expectations, given the positive guest response to our Pizookie Meal deal resulting in a similar level of dollar restaurant profit. We expect G&A in the $21 million area for Q4, which has been our recent run rate before onetime and non-operating items. In conclusion, with significant cash-flow from operations and a healthy balance sheet, BJ's has the financial flexibility to execute multiple initiatives to enhance shareholder value. Our goal remains to grow absolute dollar profit in any consumer environment. Specifically, we are focused on delivering value to shareholders through sales and productivity initiatives and through our disciplined approach to capital allocation, including new restaurant openings and restaurant remodels, as well as our share repurchase activity. We have a clear path to sales and profit growth ahead and our long-term strategy and the strong consumer appeal for the BJ's brand position us well to continue building on our successes in enhancing shareholder value. Thank you for your time today. We will now open the call to your questions. Operator?