Good morning, and thank you, Shane. Today speaking on the call, we will have Liberty Broadband's Chief Accounting and Principal Financial Officer, Brian Wendling; Ron Duncan, CEO of GCI; and Pete Pounds, CFO of GCI, will also be available to answer questions. Also, during Q&A, we will be available to answer questions related to Liberty TripAdvisor. So beginning with Liberty Broadband, you may recall, we filed a 13D on the SEC -- with the SEC on the 23rd of September. It noted that Liberty Broadband and Charter were discussing a proposed all-stock transaction. The combination would rationalize the dual corporate structure, provide enhanced trading liquidity, provide clarity to both sets of shareholders with regard to the certainty of a future transaction and continue our strong partnership with Charter in the interim. Additional updates on any potential transaction will only be provided if and when the definitive terms are agreed upon. I would note that the LBRD NAV discount has tightened considerably and since that filing is now in the mid-teens. Given ongoing discussions between Charter and Liberty Broadband, Charter did pause its buyback, which resulted in a limited amount of proceeds to Liberty Broadband from Charter sales during the period. Looking now at Charter. Charter experienced strong subscriber results and accelerating financial growth in the third quarter. They experienced a 110,000 broadband loss -- 110,000 broadband net loss, would have been growth absent the impact of ACP. I think Charter is managing its ACP disruption well and anticipate October will be the last month of meaningful impact. Charter also experienced revenue growth of 1.6% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 3.6% during the quarter. They benefit from prior cost actions and the strong political ad cycle. I would note that residential ARPU was up 1.8%, which is an acceleration versus the recent trend. Mobile continued to perform very well with 545,000 mobile net adds, which puts their base over 9 million lines. ARPU was growing in mobile due to the uptake of the Unlimited Plus tier, plus was driven by the Anytime Upgrade program. Free cash flow was [$1.6 billion], which was up 48% over the prior year, and net leverage was 4.22x, slightly below the revised target. All of these were driven by high free cash flow generation and limited share repurchase activity. Turning briefly to LTRIP. Discussions are progressing with Trip and their special committee. We remain focused on the rationalization of our capital structure. As Trip mentioned on their call, they did not repurchase shares this quarter given the ongoing discussions with LTRIP. We will provide an update on this transaction only when such discussions reach a definitive conclusion, are limited to what we can comment upon at this time. Given discussions, TripAdvisor has also elected not to present at Liberty's Investor Day. I will, at that day, make some remarks on the business since the Trip team will not be in attendance. But looking at TripAdvisor itself now, brand TripAdvisor saw a positive growth from some of its prior strategy work. MAUs return to year-over-year growth year-to-date. The direct channel monthly active users was up 30% versus the prior year. This reflects Trip's ongoing efforts to increase engagement with updated app experience and engaging product features, for example, unique travel content, AI-powered review summaries and hotel booking directly in the app. Looking at this next segment, Viator experiences continue to balance growth in investment versus profit contribution. Adjusted EBITDA was $30 million in the quarter, an 11% margin. That was solid growth outside of search -- experienced solid growth outside of search and direct and low-cost channels, and they continue to see stronger repeat bookings. Turning briefly to TheFork. It was the best financial performance they had on record with revenue up 17%, adjusted EBITDA of $5 million, which achieved a 10% margin, the highest they've ever achieved. And they've had success adding B2B partnerships with Mastercard as well as a prior announcement with Vodafone. Trip has a robust liquidity picture. As of the end of the third quarter, they had approximately $1.1 billion of cash and just under $500 million of unborrowed revolver capacity. And with that, I'll turn it over to Brian briefly to discuss the financials.