Thanks, Aubrey, and thanks to everyone for joining us today to discuss our third quarter results. Our Q3 top line was where we expected and adjusted EBITDA margin came in higher than we anticipated. Adjusted EBITDA grew 21% relative to this period last year. I’d like to start the call by reminding everyone of the GoodRx value proposition, what we’re seeing in the industry and highlight a few themes around the business and then Karsten will get into our financials. We believe our GoodRx value proposition and market position are strong and I would argue are increasingly relevant in a world with more and more attention in the healthcare being paid to patient affordability and ease of access. Let me touch on three quick points about how GoodRx benefits our customers and partners. First, GoodRx has a huge consumer and healthcare provider audience that really values what we do, reflected by our notably high net promoter scores. That gives us the ability to drive and direct high volumes in prescriptions over 100 million in 2023 to pharmacies and to pharma manufacturers. That’s both important and unique. Second, GoodRx is well positioned as a complement to health insurance. We estimate that over 90% of our users have some form of insurance and still use GoodRx because insurance formularies are getting more restrictive, patient and employer costs continue to rise via both co-pays and deductibles and more and more authorizations are being put in place that add friction and require more time from both patients and physicians. GoodRx helps consumers fill the gaps in their insurance, assessing coverage, finding an affordable price and taking friction out of the time consuming authorization processes. Third, GoodRx’s relationships with pharmacies, PBMs, healthcare providers and consumers all make GoodRx extremely relevant to pharma manufacturers. Manufacturers are leveraging GoodRx to do truly unique things like our point-of-sale cash discounts that can give them tighter, more direct relationships with patients and importantly grow volumes. In a world where there is increasing attention on medicine affordability and access, we feel good about where we sit in the healthcare ecosystem, likely stronger and more relevant than several years ago. As we look at Q3 and the near term financial outlook and what we’re seeing in the business, it really is a tale of two cities. On the plus side, we’re making progress with brand manufacturers and brand medication. Our pharma manufacturer solutions offering is expected to deliver about 20% year-over-year top line growth in the fourth quarter as brand manufacturers are using GoodRx for unique cash, co-pay and assistance programs to reach patients and physicians. This market is big. We estimate a $7 billion plus SAM. In addition, we’re extending our integrated savings program, or ISP, to include uncovered brand medication. We believe GoodRx provides a durable and distinctive way for manufacturers to reach patients and physicians and to clean up some of the pricing variability and cloudiness that plagued the industry. We’re encouraged by both our progress and our long-term potential. At the same time, the retail pharmacy environment remains unsettled, which is affecting the near-term growth of our prescription transaction business centered largely around generics. Retail pharmacy chains including CVS, Rite Aid and Walgreens are closing store locations to improve profitability and some are renegotiating reimbursement rates with PBMs and pursuing other avenues to drive up their margins. We believe this industry resettling in retail pharmacy is a short-term dynamic that isn’t permanent but does cause turbulence for our prescriptions marketplace. We believe our success at engaging retailers in direct contracts where we now have eight of our top 10 retailers working with us directly in some form, as well as our ability to deepen relationships with PBMs and leverage them as a sales channel for ISP offering will lay the foundation to exit this period of turbulence on solid footing. I’d like to share some additional color on both of these two cities to continue with the analogy. Starting on the positive in pharma manufacturer solutions, we saw solid year-over-year top line growth in the third quarter consistent with what we indicated at Investor Day, excluding the impacts from vitaCare. We’re pleased with our strategic progress to bring all brand affordability programs onto GoodRx. As we’ve talked about before, brand medications have unique challenges that complicate the patient journey, cost often being one of the biggest, we found that pharma is increasingly looking for innovative solutions to deliver affordability options to consumers and they’re turning to GoodRx because we have the reach and scale to get them in front of a high intent audience and to help drive conversion. We estimate that more than 85% of our users already have a prescription in hand and are looking for ways to afford it. Our offering to brands are now threefold. First, we help brands surface their co-pay cards and patient assistance programs to high intent patients. Second, we create clear and affordable cash prices for brand medication that often isn’t covered by insurance. And third, we now offer e-commerce capabilities that allow brands to integrate their direct to consumer experiences into our platform. We’re seeing strong momentum around our point-of-sale cash programs and believe the impact of these programs will only get bigger in the future. As a reminder, these programs lower the cash price of branded medication for consumers immediately at the checkout counter with very little friction, and are increasingly being used by manufacturers to serve more patients and to grow their revenue. Over the past several months, we’ve announced partnerships with Boehringer Ingelheim for its Humira Biosimilar, ARS Pharmaceuticals for Neffy, the first needle-free epinephrine, Pfizer for its entire portfolio of menopause hormone therapies, and Vivus for its weight management medication QSYMIA for each of these discounted cash prices are easily accessible via GoodRx. We’re now up to 72 signed point-of-sale cash programs for brands over twice the number of deals we began 2024 with. The reason for the rapid growth is that these point-of-sale programs work. Manufacturers drive incremental prescriptions, which translates into more revenue. Pharmacies often receive a higher reimbursement rate than if the transaction ran through a benefit plan and of course consumers are delighted by the savings. Here is a real-time customer story to show how these things come together. The other week my mother-in-law, Kathy, received a prescription for a Dexcom G7 diabetes unit. Kathy rolled up to her neighborhood pharmacy, I’ll withhold the name, and was informed that her insurance plan, I’ll also withhold the name, didn’t cover the G7 and it would cost her $600 a month. Kathy’s quote in her email to my wife, well, I guess I’ll have to keep sticking myself. Fortunately, Dexcom is one of our 72 cash programs and G7 devices are offered via GoodRx for $185 cash price. One of our more progressive retail partners made it super easy for Kathy. Kathy got her medicine and also happened to switch her pharmacy. When we talk about filling the gaps in insurance, removing friction for patients and adding value to the system, this is what it looks like. We’re also excited about our new e-commerce solution which just launched with Opill, the first over-the-counter birth control pill. This new capability allows consumer health and pharmaceutical brands looking to provide a frictionless experience for consumers to integrate their offerings directly into the GoodRx platform. Not only are we creating new ways for consumers to buy their medications directly through GoodRx, but this is our first partnership with an over-the-counter brand which is an incremental addressable market we’re exploring. Over the past year we’ve seen a shift towards healthcare brands creating direct to consumer experiences and the GoodRx e-commerce solution could enable us to integrate many of these offerings directly into our platform, providing valuable opportunities for both us and our partners. Similarly, we’re also working with Hy-Vee and other retail pharmacies, so consumers can soon pay over time with a firm via the GoodRx platform. This is part of our broader e-commerce strategy to streamline the consumer experience and help people access their medications by delivering a more affordable payment solution and helping them reach their deductible. Ideally, this will make the entire purchasing process simpler for patients, for retailers, and also for healthcare plans and their employees. We feel great about the trajectory in pharma manufacturer solutions and the potential growth in this business going forward. At our Investor Day in the spring, we shared a 20% or more revenue growth rate target for pharma manufacturer solutions. As Karsten will discuss, we see our Q4 results coming in at about that same level. Turning to what’s a bit more challenging in the near-term, results in our prescription marketplace were more mixed. We’ve been consistently adding market share over the past several quarters and our integrated savings program, or ISP offering, is performing well. However, our core direct to consumer prescription offering does face some near-term retail pharmacy headwinds, as we’ve mentioned previously. On the positive side, ISP, which provides consumers with a valuable complement to their health insurance and leverages PBMs to bring us new users, has been performing in line with our expectations. Our core ISP program, running for its second year now, focuses on providing patients the lowest possible price we can on covered medications, typically generics. We’re excited about the Integrated Savings Program, RAP our off formulary brand deals which we’ve begun signing and are expected to launch in early 2025. These programs will allow patients to benefit from low GoodRx prices where medications, typically brands are not covered by their benefit plan which is a growing portion of the market. We believe this capability, having a cash or co-pay offering for uncovered brand medications should be a core component of every single funded plan and we look forward to working with our plan and PBM partners to make this a reality in 2025 and beyond. While we’re excited about the higher growth areas like ISP, our prescription marketplace continues to be impacted by challenges in the retail pharmacy environment. Multiple chains are closing locations and some are renegotiating reimbursement rates with PBMs in an effort to improve profitability. In prior quarter we talked about Rite Aid store closures impacting revenue by about $5 million in the second half of 2024 and we’ve seen approximately $2.5 million of impact in the third quarter. The Walgreens and CVS store closures are indicative of the pressures retailers face. While these retailers store thinning isn’t expected to be as impactful to us on a store basis as Rite Aids continued more concentrated closures, all pharmacy retailers are taking actions to increase their revenue and margins. With all this going on, it’s important to take a step back and note that GoodRx provides invaluable support to retailers in three important ways. First, we invest over half of our revenue into sales, marketing and technology to capture and drive more prescriptions and more consumers to pharmacies. Second, we follow our partner pharmacy’s leads on how they’d like to contract with us, whether direct to GoodRx or still working through PBMs. Our direct and hybrid contracting enhances retailers ability to merchandise. As I mentioned, we now have some form of direct contracts with eight of ten of our top pharmacies and over 30% of our volume now flows through hybrid and direct contracts, in part because of the share gain we picked up at some of these direct retailers. Third, and finally, we believe our ISP programs, particularly the RAP programs that focus on brand drugs, reduce patient script abandonment, lead to more filled prescriptions, and may improve a retailers’ overall economics in meaningful ways. So what does this mean? In the short term retailers are looking at all avenues to improve their margins. Since the start of the year, we’ve all heard in the industry about increasing numbers of store closures, larger pharmacy losses and negotiations on funded reimbursements. However, in the long-term, retail pharmacies will ultimately need to attract and serve consumers with a clear value proposition that combines physical retail with online capability. We believe that the longer term consideration should ultimately be a tailwind for GoodRx, although the wind will swirl at times. Before I hand it off to Karsten, I would like to reiterate this Tale of Two Cities theme. We are getting great traction with brand manufacturers and it’s showing up in the results. Obviously, the short term retail landscape has changed quite a bit over the past 100 days in terms of store closures and retail PBM negotiations. But as these normalize, we see a continued path for durable growth in core PTR as articulated at Investor Day. For those building models, obviously you are going to want visibility into what that pacing will look like in 2025. The reality for us right now is that the goalposts are pretty wide, with brand medications and our pharma manufacturer solutions offering on track to provide 20% plus year-over-year top line growth and strong market momentum. Core PTR is experiencing some short term choppiness relative to recent quarters’ higher single digit percentage year-over-year growth rate. Given the external desire for precision guidance, we’ll keep refining our expectations over the rest of the year and to share more refined expectations with everybody on our year end call consistent with our prior practice. With that, I’ll hand it over to Karsten.