Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today. It's been a very busy quarter for JAKKS as Q3 often is with new product segments launching and plans for 2024 firming up. As you know, Q3 is always the highest shipping quarter for JAKKS. I'm proud to say we feel very confident in how we're lined up to finish the year as well as some of the initiatives the teams are working on for 2024 and beyond. We do at the beginning of the year that repeating 2022 revenue levels would be impossible feat without a total unexpected breakout hit as we had last year. With that sales outlook, we made gross margin improvement, a major focus as it is extremely important to our blueprint for enhancing overall margin. We have seen in our results, it's imperative in building and maintaining a strong balance sheet. Our teams in Asia work methodically with our manufacturing partners to ensure that we are getting the sharpest possible pricing on legacy items entering their second or third years in the market. Separately, new product development continues to be regularly challenged to ensure we are stretching the team's creativity to generate value for the consumer and for our customers, while also ensuring cost mindful product designs. With Q3's results, we can see the dividends of those efforts paid off. Year-to-date, our gross margin of 32.5% is our strongest performance in this metric since 2011. Our year-to-date gross profit of $186.9 million is $6.9 million or 4% higher than a comparable period in 2022. That improvement has helped us to compensate for increases in SG&A expenses, such that our year-to-date operating margin of 12.7% represent an improvement of 11.5% operating margin we had in the first nine months of 2022. The net results from an adjusted EBITDA view is $67.1 million in adjusted EBITDA in the quarter, up from $59.4 million in the same quarter last year. Our action play and collectibles business was up 43% in the quarter and 37% year-to-date accelerating its performance versus last quarter. Our Dolls, Role-Play and Dress Up segment is lapping that exceptional 2022 and was down approximately 27% in the quarter and 30% year-to-date off a larger base. As we pointed out last quarter, we still think it's worth noting that the Dolls segment is up significantly versus 2021, $247 million year-to-date this year versus $207 million year-to-date in 2021. This team is often a victim of its own and many successes. Our outdoor seasonal business showed some trend improvement, down only 2% in the quarter and slowing the year-to-date decline to 23%. We have some quality placement of new items this fall and as mentioned we will see some new initiatives in the works, which we think can energize this business next year and beyond. Q3 is, of course, almost the most interesting time of year to discuss our Halloween costume business. The headline is the year has worked out in line with our expectations, which is a great outcome given how big the business has become. Last quarter, we discussed how the seasonality has moved around this year. So we saw it catching up this quarter with a 19% year-over-year growth in Q3. Year-to-date, we shipped $122 million through Q3, which is 9% lower than last year. As we mentioned before, some larger US customers recalibrated their buying levels this year after an aggressive 2022. That drove most of the downside as our international business has been roughly flat year-to-date. We've been aggressively working on our distribution outside of North America and remain focused and committed to building that business to leverage our strength in North America. Again, to provide a 2021 reference plant that $122 million ship number is significantly higher than the $99 million we shipped in the first three quarters of 2021. So overall, another great year for the team as disguise [ph]. Moving on to a market view. The past quarter was also noteworthy and continuing our efforts to expand our overall business outside the United States. In Latin America, we are up and shipping 50-plus percent year-to-date. Although, we've had an office in Mexico for several years, this year we started offering selective domestic replenishment for key items via a local third-party warehouse. This investment helps to evolate our year round on-shelf presence further proving the viability of our product line to local retailers. With this success, they can -- then company place the larger orders with us FOB in Asia consistent with our go-to-market approach. Over time, we also see as a potential platform for additional shipments into Latin America. And we're quickly seeing a positive reaction to retail with syndicated data suggesting we're up over 50% in Mexico year-over-year. Also in the quarter, we officially opened our dual-purpose office and warehouse facility in Northern Italy. We plan to start shipping from there in the New Year, which will generate a number of new benefits. Specifically, being able to serve a wider range of smaller customers more quickly and with improved economics in shipping smaller orders as individual deliveries from Northern Europe. In addition, we onboarded a new team with deep industry experience in JAKKS France, a market where we know we've been underperforming during COVID. Although our COO, Jack McGrath, is officially not in his new role as President of European operations until the New Year, he has been spending a considerable amount of time and focus on addressing challenges in the region to accelerate our performance in 2024 and beyond. I couldn't be more excited about the opportunity presented but has taken his years of experience with JAKKS and focusing them on taking a fresh look on how we're doing business in the European markets. Switching now to talking about what we're seeing at retail. On the toy side, it's been the case all year and continued this past quarter when we look at our own data and syndicated data. We see that the toy portion of our business continues to perform better than the overall industry in the US. The same has been true in some of our European markets where we also see syndicated data. Certainly, some of the great content from our studio partners is helping to drive people to the register this year, much as it did last year. But broadly, we've been pleased with how the total portfolio is performing this year, as we said last quarter. That being said, in Q3, we did see retail slowing. Retail sales at our top 3 US accounts were down low single digits year-to-date and down high single digits in the quarter. Separately, at the end of the quarter, retail inventory at the same accounts were down over 20% versus prior year, delivering on their goals to finish the calendar year at lower owned inventory levels. As we work through this transitional year at retail, we mangers in stock across all of our key product segments and are set up well to fulfill demand in Q4. I will now pass it over to John for some further comments. After which I will come back to discuss Q4 and a bit about next year. John?