Thanks, Chris. Please note that today's results include several Los Angeles wildfire effects. As Chris mentioned last quarter, we are committed to these communities and to actively rebuilding them. Our first quarter customer results include approximately 9,000 disconnects related to the fire. We provided credits to impacted customers and also incurred some incremental expenses, but first quarter adjusted EBITDA was not meaningfully impacted by either. We expect that as we rebuild our plant to approximately 6,000 homes passed in Los Angeles over the coming quarters, we will incur additional CapEx, though not at the level that would require us to change our outlook. Also, please note that this quarter, we made a number of expense reclassifications to reflect changes in how we manage our business. In connection with the recent launch of our Spectrum business brand. Reclassifications do not result in any changes to operating expenses or adjusted EBITDA for any period. We've reclassified prior periods so that appropriate year-over-year growth calculation can be accurately derived. And today's published trending schedule also shows our P and L using both the new and previous expense disclosure methodologies. So that you can see the impact of the changes. Let's please turn to our customer results on slide ten. Including residential and SMB, we lost 60,000 Internet customers in the first quarter. In mobile, we added 514,000 lines. Video customers declined by 181,000. Versus a loss of 405,000 in 1Q24. With the improvement primarily driven by the re-bundling we launched in September along with our life unlimited brand refresh. Video performance doesn't yet reflect the benefits of incorporating seamless entertainment apps in our product. Wireline voice customers declined by 278,000. We were generally pleased with our first quarter customer results. During the quarter, we saw improvements in customer gross additions across Internet, video, and mobile. And lower churn in video and mobile. With Internet churn stable year over year despite the lack of ACP. And well below pre-COVID levels. We continue to compete well across our footprint. In rural, we ended the quarter with 902,000 subsidized rural pass lines. We grew those passings by 89,000 in the first quarter and by over 4,000 over the last twelve months. And we generated 39,000 customer net additions in our subsidized rural foot in the quarter. Continue to expect rural passings growth of approximately 450,000 2025. Our biggest year so far, in addition to continued non-rural construction and fill-in activity. Moving to first quarter revenue on slide eleven. Over the last year, residential customers declined by 2.1%, while residential revenue per customer relationship grew by 2.1% year over year. Given promotional rate step-ups, rate adjustments, and the growth of Spectrum Mobile. Those factors were partly offset by a higher mix of non-video customers, growth of lower-priced video packages within our base, and $47 million of costs allocated to programmer streaming apps and netted within video revenue. As slide eleven shows, in total, residential revenue declined by 0.1%. And Turning to commercial revenue. Total commercial grew by 1.4% year over year. With mid-market and large business revenue, formerly Spectrum Enterprise, growth of 3.9% driven by PSU growth of 5.4%. When excluding all wholesale revenue, mid-market and large business revenue grew by 4.4%. Small business revenue declined by 0.2%, reflecting a decline in small business customers, partly offset by higher revenue per customer. First quarter advertising revenue declined by 12.9% primarily due to less political revenue. Excluding political, advertising revenue decreased by 5.1% due to a more challenged national and local advertising market. Other revenue grew by 13.4%, primarily driven by higher mobile devices. And in total, consolidated first quarter revenue was up 0.4% year over year and 0.8% when excluding advertising revenue. Moving to operating expenses and adjusted EBITDA on slide twelve. In the first quarter, total operating expenses declined by 2.6% year over year. We Program and costs declined by 10.4% due to a 7.3% decline in video customers year over year. A higher mix of lighter video packages, and $47 million of cost allocated to programmer streaming apps and netted within video revenue. Partly offset by higher programming rates. First quarter 2025 programming costs included $12 million of favorable adjustments. Versus $28 million of favorable adjustments in the prior year period. Other cost of revenue increased by 8.7% primarily driven by higher mobile device sales and higher mobiles or and mobile service direct costs. Cost to service customers, which combines field and technology operations and customer operations, declined 2.2% year over year. Primarily due to productivity from our ten-year investments, including lower labor costs. Marketing and residential sales expense grew by 7.7% we remain focused on driving customer acquisition. And given our life unlimited brand relaunch in September. Finally, other expense declined by 7.8% mostly driven by one-time benefits of $75 million. Adjusted EBITDA grew by 4.8% year over year in the quarter. And by 3.4% when excluding the one-time benefits and other expense that I mentioned. Turning to net income, we generated $1.2 billion of net income attributable to Charter Communications, Inc. shareholders in the first quarter. Compared to $1.1 billion last year. Given this quarter's higher adjusted EBITDA and lower interest expense, partly offset by a noncash impairment driven by a balance sheet write-down of our LA Laker RSN this quarter. Turning to slide thirteen. Capital expenditures totaled $2.4 billion in the first quarter, down about $400 million from last year's first quarter, driven by the timing of CPE spend, upgrade rebuild related to network evolution, and line extension spend. While we continue to assess the potential impact of new tariffs, we don't currently expect tariffs to have a significant impact on our capital expenditures for this year. And over the next several years. We have attractive agreements with our equipment vendors, we continue to work with them to minimize the impact of tariffs while at the same time supporting the health of the cable equipment ecosystem. We continue to expect total 2025 capital expenditures to reach approximately $12 billion. And we have not changed our multiyear capital outlook. We also don't anticipate the tariffs to have a meaningful impact on our P and L as the vast majority of our P and L expenses are programming, labor, and service driven and are not subject to the new tariffs. Turning to free cash flow on slide fourteen. First quarter free cash totaled $1.6 billion an increase of approximately $1.2 billion compared to last year's first quarter. We The increase was primarily driven by lower capital expenditures, higher EBITDA, and lower cash interest. Just a brief comment on 2025 cash taxes. We still expect, under existing tax legislation, that our calendar year 2025 cash tax payments will total between $1.6 billion and $2 billion. However, we expect second quarter cash taxes to total around $1 billion, given the two cash tax payments we are always required to make in the second quarter, and some other timing items. We finished the quarter with $93.6 billion in debt principal, Our weighted average cost of debt remains at an attractive 5.2%. Our current run rate annualized cash interest is $4.9 billion. We began repurchasing stock in late February, following shareholder approval of the Liberty Broadband transaction. During the quarter, we we repurchased 2.1 million Charter Communications, Inc. shares in Charter Holdings common units totaling $750 million at an average price per share of $365 As of the end of the first quarter, our ratio of net debt to last twelve month adjusted EBITDA moved down to 4.06 times. And stood at 4.16 times pro forma for the pending Liberty Broadband transaction. Decline in leverage in the quarter was driven by our inability to repurchase shares in the open market until we had shareholder approval of the Liberty Broadband transaction in late February. We expect to gradually increase our leverage to the middle of our four to four and a half times range pro forma for the Liberty transaction over the next several quarters. As we laid out last quarter, our plan is to grow EBITDA in 2025. And with strong contributions from the mobile business as well as continuing efficiency improvements driven by our investments, we made good progress against that plan in the first quarter. As we continue to grow the business financially, we will also see outsized improvements to free cash flow, driven by the end of our major one-time investment in our network evolution and subsidized rural initiative. That reduction in capital spending from approximately $12 billion in 2025 to less than $8 billion in 2028 is equivalent to over $25 of annual free cash flow per share. Based on today's share count. Ultimately, the strength of our P and L and decline in capital intensity over the next several years. Combined with our appropriate balance sheet management and resulting share buybacks, will drive stronger returns for shareholders for many years. And with that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q and A.