Thanks, Ynon. While comparisons improved from the first quarter, our second quarter financial results were negatively impacted as retailers continued to manage inventory levels compared to the buildup in the prior year. And while we gained share, we saw some overall industry softness. Net sales of $1.087 billion declined 12% or 13% in constant currency, compared to the prior year. Adjusted gross margin of 44.9% was comparable to the prior year and a significant improvement from the first quarter comparison to the prior year. Adjusted operating income was $75 million, a decline of $47 million compared to the prior year due primarily to lower sales. Adjusted EPS was $0.10 compared to $0.18 a year ago. And adjusted EBITDA of $148 million was $37 million below the prior year. We continue to expect consumer demand for Mattel product will be positive for the full year and revenue comparisons to improve in the second half as shipping patterns revert to historical trends. Given our first half performance and outlook for the balance of the year, we are reiterating our guidance, including for net sales growth in constant currency adjusted EPS and adjusted EBITDA. Turning to gross billings in constant currency, first, by category. Overall, gross billings declined 12%, including a 2-point negative impact from Russia. Our POS in the quarter, which excludes Russia, declined by high-single digits. That said, we continued to significantly outpace the industry and gain market share globally. Dolls grew 9%, driven by Disney Princess and Disney Frozen and the global rollout of Monster High, partly offset by Barbie. POS for dollars declined mid-single digits, reflecting overall declines in the category. Barbie declined 7% with POS down low-double digits. Barbie POS continued to be impacted by the shift of promotions to better align with the theatrical release of the movie. With the success of the Barbie movie and our robust marketing plans for the second half, we have seen improving trends with Barbie's month-to-date POS in July turning positive. Mattel outperformed the industry and gained over 400 basis points of market share in the Dolls category year-to-date. And Barbie was the number one doll property globally per Circana. Vehicles continued its strong performance growing 10%, in line with POS. Growth was primarily driven by Hot Wheels die-cast vehicles, which continued to perform well. Year-to-date, Mattel gained over 450 basis points of market share in the Vehicles category, achieving the highest first half share on record per Circana. Infant, Toddler and Preschool declined 29%, reflecting the impact of retailer inventory movements and overall category weakness. POS was down low-double digits less than gross billings, primarily due to BabyGear as we continue to realign the business to more profitable segments. Mattel outperformed the category gained 60 basis points of market share year-to-date and was the number one toy company globally in the Infant, Toddler and Preschool category per Circana. Challenger categories in aggregate declined 40% due primarily to lower sales and action figures as we lap the theatrical tie-ins in the prior year. POS declined low-double digits, but ahead of gross billings. Regional performance was impacted by retail inventory headwinds in various markets as well as some industry softness in key regions. North America gross billings declined 18%, POS declined low-double digits. For the first half per Circana. Mattel gained market share in North America. EMEA declined 8%, reflecting an 8 percentage point impact from Russia. POS, excluding Russia, increased high-single digits. Latin America grew 3% with POS comparable to the prior year. per Circana, Mattel gained market share in Latin America year-to-date, extending our number one market position. Asia Pacific increased 7% driven primarily by growth in China and India. POS declined low-single digits. As previously discussed, retailer inventory levels were elevated heading into 2023. The position improved in the first quarter and has improved further this quarter. At the end of the second quarter, retailer inventory levels in dollars are below prior year levels by a double-digit percentage, with weeks of supply declining high-single digits. At this point, we believe the retail inventory correction is mostly behind us. Adjusted gross margin of 44.9% in the quarter was comparable to the prior year. There were several puts and takes to this performance. On the positive side, price increases, primarily the carryover benefit from 2022 actions, contributed 170 basis points. Savings from the Optimizing for Growth program had a positive impact of 150 basis points and foreign exchange had a positive benefit of 90 basis points. These positive factors were offset by cost inflation, while continuing to moderate had a 140 basis point impact; fixed cost absorption of 100 basis points associated with lower volumes; inventory management costs, primarily closeout sales and obsolescence of 90 basis points; and mix and other factors of 80 basis points. Moving down the P&L. Advertising expenses of $90 million were comparable to the prior year and up 100 basis points as a percentage of net sales. Looking ahead, we are planning for increased advertising spend in the second half. Adjusted SG&A declined 6% to $324 million, primarily driven by our cost management efforts and savings from our Optimizing for Growth program. Adjusted operating income was $75 million compared to $121 million a year ago. The $47 million decline was due to lower sales partly offset by lower adjusted SG&A. Adjusted EBITDA declined by $37 million to $148 million, impacted by the same factors. On a year-to-date basis, cash from operations, reflecting seasonality of the business was a use of $326 million compared to a use of $425 million in the prior year. The $99 million improvement was primarily driven by improved working capital performance, primarily inventories, partly offset by lower net income. Capital expenditures were $73 million compared to $79 million a year ago and free cash flow was a use of $399 million compared to $503 million in the prior year. On a trailing 12-month basis, we generated $361 million in free cash flow compared to $147 million in the prior year, an increase of $214 million. The increase was primarily driven by cash from operations, benefiting from improved working capital performance, partly offset by higher capital expenditures supporting recent capacity additions. We have utilized a portion of our free cash flow to repurchase shares. In the first half, we repurchased $50 million of our shares and look to continue repurchases in the second half. Taking a look at the balance sheet. We finished the quarter with a cash balance of $300 million compared to $275 million in the prior year. The increase reflects the free cash flow generated over the trailing 12 months, mostly offset by the use of cash to reduce debt and repurchase shares. Total debt declined to $2.38 billion from $2.576 billion last year, reflecting the repayment of $250 million of debt in the fourth quarter last year. Accounts receivable declined by $98 million to $891 million, broadly in line with the decline in sales. We continue to make good progress in reducing owned inventories. Inventory was $972 million compared to $1.178 billion in the prior year, a reduction of $206 million. Looking ahead, we are well positioned to achieve our targeted inventory reductions in 2023, which will contribute to free cash flow generation. Our leverage ratio increased to 3.1 times at the end of the second quarter compared to 2.3 times a year ago. The increase is primarily due to the timing of our quarterly results. We expect to end 2023 with a leverage ratio of approximately 2.5 times. We generated $24 million of savings in the quarter as we continue to execute the Optimizing for Growth program launched in 2021. We remain on track to achieve our program savings goal of $300 million by 2023. Total estimated cash expenditures to implement the program are expected to be $155 million to $185 million. We are reiterating our full year 2023 guidance consistent with our first quarter earnings call. This includes our expectation for net sales to be comparable to last year in constant currency, adjusted EPS in the range of $1.10 to $1.20; adjusted EBITDA of $900 million to $950 million and for free cash flow to exceed $400 million. We continue to expect growth in the Dolls and Vehicles categories, offset by declines in Infant, Toddler and Preschool and in our Challenger categories in aggregate. For our Power Brands, we expect Barbie and Hot Wheels to grow and for Fisher-Price to decline. At current spot rates, we expect foreign exchange translation will have a positive impact of approximately 2 percentage points on 2023 net sales. In terms of phasing and with the retailer inventory correction mostly behind us, we expect gross billings to return to historical trends with two-thirds of annual shipments in the second half. This will result in an accelerated growth rate, particularly in Q4 as we wrap an atypical retailer inventory decline in the prior year. We are operating in a challenging macroeconomic environment with higher volatility that may impact consumer demand. The guidance considers what the company is aware of today, but remains subject to further market volatility, any unexpected disruption and other macroeconomic risks and uncertainties. In closing, Mattel's second quarter performance and first half was in line with expectations, and we believe we are well positioned to achieve our full year guidance. The balance sheet is strong and business fundamentals are sound. Retailer inventories are well positioned, and we look forward to meeting consumer demand for our products as we enter the second half of the year and the all-important holiday season. And now, I will turn it over to the operator.