Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter earnings call. First, let me say, I'm sorry that due to circumstances beyond our control, the press release went out later than it usually does, and I hope that hasn't caused too much consternation. With me as usual are Brooks Pierce and Eric Carrera, and we welcome today our new CFO, James Richardson. James joined at the beginning of the year just as we were knee-deep into the audit process. And with this call today, we successfully conclude his baptism by fire. Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $30.9 million, up 22% from last year. The full year adjusted EBITDA of $100.1 million, and $99.3 million for '24 and '23, respectively, reflect minor revisions to prior results due to the timing, but not the total amount of revenue recognition. We can discuss this more in Q&A, if anybody wants to understand it more clearly. As a result of these revisions, we intend to file our 10-K by Wednesday this week or by the end of the week at the very latest. Additionally and perhaps more importantly, as we'll be disclosed in the 10-K, we recently received a letter from the SEC, informing us that our inquiry is now closed and that they would be taking no further action. We are, of course, very pleased with this outcome. The results for the fourth quarter and full year are in line with expectations, and we feel that the -- all the business areas are in very good shape. The Interactive business continues to be the star of the show with fourth quarter revenue and EBITDA growth of 45% and 105%, respectively. Interactive accounted for approximately 22% of overall company EBITDA after corporate cost allocation in the fourth quarter. And given this given growth trajectory, we think it will reach well over 25% by the end of the first quarter. I think it's maybe not widely understood that in a handful of states that have both iGaming and Sports Betting, primarily New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan, iGaming or Sports Betting by a ratio of 4 or 5: 1. Of course, we can't predict the rate at which new states will adopt iGaming legislation, but my many years in the gaming industry, I'd rather not say how many, convinced me that as was the case with horse racing, lottery, casino gaming, tribal gaming and most recently, sports betting. The eventual spread of iGaming is inevitable, especially, as in the current environment, individual states begin finding themselves short of cash. So the opportunity for us in this business is limitless and our commitment to product and technology performance is concomitant. The other part of our digital business, Virtual Sports continues to perform at an extraordinarily high level of profitability, but at the same time, continues to try our patients. During our third quarter call, we predicted that we expected Virtual Sports revenue to hit an inflection point during the fourth quarter, and this did not happen. Brooks will delve into all this in more detail in a moment. But given performance so far this quarter, we seem to have indeed passed the inflection point, buttressed by a number of deliberate actions we have taken to strengthen the business. Given modest acceleration in Virtual Sports together with the aforementioned anticipated growth in Interactive, we expect our overall Digital business to approach 60% of EBITDA by year-end. At the same time, our retail oriented businesses continued to perform very well with content creation and distribution being the primary drivers. In Illinois, for example, the only jurisdiction in America so far to adopt a server based gaming model. Our products are performing extremely well and our installed base of razors now generated an excellent recurring stream of blades. With there being a lot of talk today about recession, I want to mention that our business right now is structured extremely well to sail through any downturn. Over half our profit, as I mentioned a moment ago is digital. Over 85% of our revenue is contractually recurring. Our EBITDA margins are high and our leverage quite comfortable. But let me conclude by touching on a couple of these points. While one-time equipment sales account for only 10% of our overall business, which speaks very well for our inherent recession resistance. They sometimes fall disproportionately late in the fourth quarter and 2024 was one of those years. As a result, there was a significant year-to-year increase in accounts receivable for year end to year end 2024, and this in turn resulted in our year end cash being less than anticipated. A snapshot a few weeks later would have shown a very significant difference. Finally, on the subject of leverage, most of you would know that our current credit facility matures in June 2026 and would therefore become current in 2025. Consequently, we've been working hard with the goal of having a new facility in place prior to June. With the expectation that rates are likely to generally drift downward and perhaps down still more so in the event of a recession, our new facility is more likely to be floating rate rather than fixed as it is now and to be generally more flexible. And with that, I'll turn it over to Brooks.