Thank you, Tia, and good afternoon, everyone. In addition to Tia, our COO and General Counsel, our CFO, Brady Hayden, is on our call today. I appreciate everyone joining us today for this milestone quarterly report. In light of well-directed hard and efficient work by a tight talent dense team of people. We generated our highest ever quarterly adjusted free cash flow. Specifically, we generated $2.5 million in adjusted free cash flow in the second quarter, a year-over-year improvement of about $7 million, and an over 100% improvement from Q1 2024. This marks our seventh consecutive quarter of adjusted free cash flow improvement. We also increased our top line revenue sequentially. I'm happy to say, and I would like to make it abundantly clear that Curiosity is generating cash. I know that sometimes accounting terms like EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA can be confusing, which is why I'm using this very concrete language about generating cash. Even as we paid a significant dividend, our cash position from Q1 to Q2 increased. We believe we're well positioned to grow top line revenue to generate meaningful adjusted free cash flow and to continue to pay our dividend from surplus cash. In Q2, we increased our direct subscription revenue sequentially and year-over-year. At approximately $10 million in direct revenue for the quarter, our annualized direct revenue alone now exceeds our current annualized operating expenses, including our more variable categories like content and marketing. As we have considerable flexibility around our marketing and content investments, we do have the ability to lever up our marketing and acquisition spend based on seasonality, key promotables and other relevant company and industry dynamics. While our overall licensing and bundled revenue was up slightly sequentially, I would like to note that we did expand into some new categories of licensing partners in Q2 and granted some rights that we had never explicitly granted. As licensing can be lumpy, these new categories will not necessarily reduce spikes, but they will certainly help to increase our floor. We are achieving new heights and critical milestones while continuing to thoughtfully rationalize our cost base. Simple way for companies to cut costs is to just slash marketing. Now that's the easy way out and that can have a damaging long-term impact on growth. We've not done that. We believe our cash marketing spend in 2024 will be roughly equivalent to what it was in 2023. We've done the harder work in reducing annualized overall operational costs by more than 30%. We've renegotiated vendor relationships, consolidated vendors, leverage certain emerging productivity tools and like other profitable companies, properly incentivized cost containment across the organization. On the content front, we launched several new programming initiatives, including Earth Month, anchored by the premier of our landmark original series, The Sun. The Jaws & Claws Week, anchored by the premier of our three-part original series Tracker's Diary: Tigers of Nepal, and our extensive new Summer Doc-busters campaign, with a premier of groundbreaking original series Fateful Planet. Throughout the quarter, we continued to premiere many other original series and specials across the full spectrum of factual, including original series like Taste: The Flavor of Life, a great look at the evolutionary role of deliciousness, and Wings: World War Two in the Skies, a two-part special chronicling the air-wars in Europe and the pacific released for the 80th Anniversary of D-Day. In closing, I'm delighted to again reinforce that for the quarter, we generated $2.5 million in adjusted free cash flow, and we ended the period with nearly $40 million in cash and equivalents and zero debt. We believe our strong balance sheet and projected 2024 positive cash flow make us stand out in the current environment. Moreover, we continue to believe that our global appeal, our direct subscriber base and direct platforms, our broad and deep content library of tens of thousands of licensable audio and video programs and raw footage, as well as monetizable data sets like images, transcripts, code and text, our multi-year third-party agreements, our public company currency and our rationalized cost structure are uniquely favorable attributes that provide us with sustainable long-term strength and exceptional flexibility. I'd now like to pass the baton to my friend and colleague, Brady Hayden.