Thank you, Shelly, and good morning, everyone. I let off with this 30-second spot and did so very purposely because one of our key focuses right now is on [catos] (ph) for greater growth and the strategic long-range plan initiatives to accomplish this. In this regard, the first quarter of fiscal 2024 has proven to be two different conversations. We are happy to report that our long-range plan growth initiatives are continuing to progress forward. Conversely, we are disappointed by the first quarter's tough comp sales performance. While we are energized by our brand campaign that just launched and the greater opportunity to grow market share, I'll get into the brand, marketing, and campaign details shortly. But know that what you have heard is but one tangible element of our LRP, and specifically an initiative to create greater awareness and access for DXL, with big adult consumers to drive greater growth. So now, I'll say thanks again to Shelly, and thank you all for joining us on the call today. For today's call, there are two major topics that I want to talk about. First, I want to cover our first quarter results. As many of you likely have already seen in our press release, which was issued earlier this morning, our first quarter sales performance was disappointing. We posted a comp sales decrease for the first quarter of negative 11.3%, driven primarily by lower traffic levels to our stores and lower conversion of traffic on our website, while average order value was pressured in both channels. At this point in the year, we are hoping to start to see a greater inflection in sales, but the consumer is pressured and he is just not prioritizing spend on big and tall apparel yet. With that said, I'll get into more of the details behind our first quarter performance in a few moments. Second, I'm excited to update you on our long-range plan. As I mentioned on our Q4 earnings call back in March, we are executing an LRP that is comprised of four specific initiatives designed to overcome 4 specific challenges we believe limit our potential for a greater rate of growth in our current business model. Let me remind you of what those are. First is overcoming a lack of brand awareness. We have launched a new brand advertising campaign for the first time since 2017. The brand campaign launched on May 13 in a three-matched market test in Boston, Detroit, and St. Louis. Media includes broadcast television, connected TV, streaming video, audio, pay digital channels, and out of home, as well as owned marketing. Second is our store footprint. We know there are gaps in our store portfolio. We call it white space. In April, we opened the first of eight stores for fiscal 2024 in Coon Rapids, Minnesota. Our second store is just opened last weekend in Thousand Oaks, California, and we have two more stores expecting to open later in Q2. We will open four more white space stores in the second half of the year. This begins to further address the challenge big and tall men have shared with us and why they do not shop with us with 44% of the time because there is no store near them and 35% of the time because there is no store conveniently near them. The third initiative is improving our digital experience. We are transitioning to a new and improved e-commerce platform through a phased approach. The first element of this new platform is launching now. A second element will take place in late summer and a final update just after the holidays. The new platform enables us to enhance critically important operating capabilities while serving as the foundation for key growth drivers, specifically improvements in customer experience and user experience. And finally, the fourth initiative is alliances and collaborations. Collaborating with other retailers allows us to overcome the challenge of reaching consumers who may never be exposed to the DXL brand through our organic channels. On April 29th, we announced our latest collaboration with Nordstrom, which will allow us to bring the DXL experience beyond our four walls and directly to the Nordstrom's consumer. We are very excited to be launching DXL's big and tall offering on Nordstrom's digital marketplace platform. All four of these initiatives are progressing, but the number of new white space stores and the timeline for the development is behind our plans. In fiscal 2023, we opened three new stores instead of the five planned, and in fiscal 2024, we are now expecting to open eight stores instead of the plan 10. Since late in 2023, we have been pursuing steps which have been shared previously, including the hiring of Beta, a commercial real estate transaction and advisory platform, and we are also evolving the organization in an effort to improve the process and outcome. Continuing with the first quarter review, and despite the challenges in sales results, our regimented operating process, structure, and discipline have helped us to deliver gross margins, inventory, and operating expenses better than expected. At the end of the first quarter our inventory is in great shape. Fresh spring receipts have been flowing into our stores and are available on our website which is setting up a great experience for our customers as we approach Father's Day. We continue to carefully manage both our operating expenses and capital expenditures while still funding our growth initiatives. Because of this careful cost management, we continue to maintain a fortress balance sheet. And even though results this quarter do not reflect the potential of our brand or the opportunities yet in front of us, we are excited about the future. So let me get right into a few more details about our first quarter performance. Comp sales for stores were down 11.4% while direct was down 11.0% for the first quarter. Comp sales by month improved ever so slightly, with February down 12.7%, March down 11.1%, and April down 10.4%. For the first three weeks of May, comp sales are essentially mirroring the first quarter. As I stated a moment ago, our first quarter results did not meet our expectations. We are operating in a highly challenged environment and this past quarter did not reflect the potential for our brand. Our results continue to be impacted by broader macroeconomic challenges and an ever tightening share of his wallet. As inflation continues to rise, our customers are pushing more and more of their spending into essentials and consequently that puts pressure on discretionary spending such as apparel. Similar to what we saw in the fourth quarter of last year, our customers bought fewer items, displayed more price sensitivity in their buying behaviour. On our last earnings call in March, we talked about how our sales expectation for the full year was to be somewhere between $500 million and $530 million. We now estimate sales to be at the lower end of that range. Despite the decline in sales expectations, we are still guiding to an adjusted EBITDA margin of 7% thanks to strong merchandise margins and careful expense management. We still have work to do, but we are cautiously optimistic that we can execute our fundamentals by focusing on what we can control. In stores, the narrative from fiscal 2023 has continued into the start of 2024. Traffic to stores accounts for approximately 90% of the comp sales decline, while [dials] (ph) for transaction and conversion make up the remaining 10%. On a positive note, our three new stores that opened last fall in Queens, New York; Cincinnati, Ohio; and Pasadena, California, are all driving strong dollars for transaction and new to file rates that are approximately 3 times the change average. Traffic to the stores has been slow to ramp but not unexpected given the difficult consumer environment we are observing with the rest of the store portfolio. Our 11 casual mail stores that were converted to DXL last year have also been a bright spot. Collectively, these 11 stores are roughly flat in sales comp year-to-date as compared to the full portfolio, which I mentioned earlier is down 11.4%. We expect to convert five more casual mail stores to DXL formats by the end of the fiscal 2024, which leaves only 12 anchor stores remaining under the casual mail banner. In merchandising, the overall sales penetration between designer collections and private label brands was relatively consistent with last year. However, we have seen the customer trading down within both categories. In a recently published report by Adobe Analytics, the authors conclude that consumers have been trading down to less expensive goods across a broad spectrum of categories, including apparel. The research concluded that 55% of apparel units purchased in the first four months of 2024 have come from the lowest quartile of prices, whereas for the same period last year, these goods only represented 35% of units. Likewise, higher price goods have decline in share from approximately 22% of units to this year, consisting of only 8% to 9%. As many of you know, DXL trades in moderate to upper moderate price points, and this report from Adobe offers further perspective for our traffic challenges. We see this as confirmation that inflationary pressures are continuing to drive significant changes in consumer purchasing behavior across multiple product categories, including apparel. That being said, we did resist the temptation to promote our way to a favorable sales result, and consequently, our merchandise margins have held up better than expected. Inventory management continues to be an achievement of our operating discipline compared to last year, our quarter inventory was down $9.1 million, or approximately 9%, while our inventory turnover has improved by almost 30% from 2019. Clearance levels of 9.7% at the end of the first quarter are in-line with our long-term expectations of 10%. And from a brand perspective, Vineyard Vines, [Freddie] (ph), Hugo Boss, and UNTUCKit have all performed well. Our customers love the new options and styling of our four brands. And UNTUCKit is now available in 30 stores, and we plan to increase to 50 in the fall. Let me now switch gears and provide you an update on our marketing and our brand campaign launch. We are very excited to have launched our first brand campaign since 2017 on May 13th. As I mentioned we are employing a matched market test in three markets to measure the lift we can expect when we roll out nationally in 2025. The campaign is running in Boston, Detroit, and St. Louis and will be matched in similar markets and similar store density. The initial flight will run through the important Father's Day season. The campaign is running across multiple channels including broadcast and cable TV, connected TV, streaming video, audio, and paid digital, including social and out of home. Early indications are positive as defined by greater online traffic in those markets. We conducted consumer research that validated our strategy and insight, as well as the messaging to be sure it resonated with customers. We continue to believe this initiative can be a meaningful catalyst for our business as we introduce more big and tall shoppers to DXL and our unrivaled fit. As I mentioned last quarter, another key initiative in our LRP, is improving our customer digital experience. Replacing the current platform while developing critically imperative operating capabilities, rebuilding the foundation of key growth drivers, and improving the customer experience are all underway and progressing on schedule. This work will reduce friction and simplify the digital shopping experience. We believe this will improve the conversion of traffic on site with the enhanced capabilities of the new platform. Additionally, these upgrades will provide a more agile, speed-oriented opportunity to increase the pace of change with access to more automation. And finally, it will provide an enhanced level customer search functionality and will better leverage emerging AI capabilities. The first phase of the rollout is happening now and the platform's evolution will continue to progress in late summer, and then the balance of the change will be executed by year end. The evolution of our tech stack has continued as we endeavor to deliver more relevant messaging to specific cohorts of customers while delivering greater levels of personalization at scale. We have expanded our relationship with Luxor, which we initially engaged in Q2 of 2023, to handle our remarketing emails. We're in the process of migrating all of our email program to them, following the outstanding results delivered in our proof of concept work over the last year. We believe this change will yield greater revenue, while providing better analytics and capabilities to better engage our customers. Let me now transition to a topic that we think is going to be a big win for DXL. Last quarter, I mentioned that we were in the final stages of an agreement with another retailer that will allow us to sell our product through a new distribution channel that is aligned with DXL's leading retail consumer experience. As we reported in our press release at the end of April, I'm very happy that this leading retailer is Nordstrom. We are looking forward to bringing the DXL big and tall offering to Nordstrom's digital marketplace soon. We are currently in discovery mode for more collaborative offers with several other brands and we are optimistic that some of these brands could play a role in our assortment in time and similar to the collaboration with UNTUCKit. And with that I'm now going to turn it over to Peter for a review of the financials. Peter?