Thanks, Ynon. It has been an amazing experience for me at Mattel. It's a great company with a very promising future, and I look forward to supporting a seamless transition. In terms of Mattel's performance in Q4, as you just heard, we grew top-line and achieved very strong profitability. Net sales of $1,646 million increased 2% as reported or 3% in constant currency. Adjusted gross margin increased 200 basis points to 50.8%. Adjusted operating income increased 10% to $161 million. Adjusted EPS increased 21% to $0.35 and adjusted EBITDA increased by $15 million to $249 million. Looking at our full-year performance as compared to the prior year, net sales declined 1% as reported and 0.5% in constant currency. Adjusted gross margin improved 340 basis points to 50.9%. Adjusted operating income increased 15% to $738 million, more than offsetting the Barbie movie related benefits in the prior year. Adjusted EPS increased by 32% to $1.62. Adjusted EBITDA increased $110 million or 12% to $1,058 million, and we generated $598 million of free cash flow. Turning to gross billings in constant currency by category, beginning with the fourth quarter. Overall, gross billings increased 3% driven by growth in vehicles and challenger categories collectively, partly offset by dolls as we wrap the Barbie movie benefits from the prior year and Infant, Toddler, and Preschool as we continue to exit certain product lines in the Baby Gear and Power Wheels segments. Total POS declined by low-single digits. Dolls gross billings declined 3% due primarily to a 13% decline in Barbie, partly offset by growth in Monster High. Vehicles had another outstanding quarter, growing 16%, driven primarily by Hot Wheels, which grew 17%. Infant, Toddler, and Preschool declined 4% due to the declines in Baby Gear and Power Wheels, partly offset by 4% growth in Fisher-Price, which benefited from Little People and Fisher-Price Wood. We are happy to see Fisher-Price grew and the turnaround strategy starting to bear fruit. Challenger categories collectively grew 6%, driven primarily by double-digit growth in both Action Figures and Games, partly offset by a decline in Building Sets. Turning to the full year, gross billings were comparable to the prior year with gains in vehicles and challenger categories overall, offset by declines in Dolls and Infant, Toddler, and Preschool. POS declined low single digits. Doll's gross billings declined 8% due primarily to the movie-related comparison in Barbie. Barbie gross billings declined 12%. Vehicles had an outstanding year growing 10%, driven by Hot Wheels die-cast cars, tracks and playsets, and RC. As Ynon mentioned, Hot Wheels achieved its seventh consecutive record year. Disney Pixar Cars and Matchbox also contributed to growth. Infant, Toddler, and Preschool declined 4%, primarily due to Baby Gear and Power Wheels reflecting our exit strategy, partly offset by growth in Fisher-Price. Fisher-Price grew 4%, benefiting from the launch of FP Wood and growth in Little People, partly offset by a decline in Infant. Challenger categories collectively grew 3% driven by games, which benefited from double-digit growth in UNO and Action Figures, partly offset by a decline in Building Sets. Looking at fourth-quarter gross billings by region. North America increased 1%, EMEA increased 10%, Latin America declined 5%, reflecting softness in Mexico, and Asia Pacific grew 10%, driven by strong growth in Australia. Looking at full-year gross billings by region, North America declined 1%, EMEA declined 2%, Latin America declined 1%, and Asia Pacific grew 10%, driven primarily by double-digit growth in Australia. We ended the year with retail inventory levels comparable to the prior year, both in dollars and weeks of supply. While comparable at year-end, retail inventory movements had a positive impact on gross billings growth in the fourth quarter, given we're wrapping a more significant seasonal decline in the prior year. We are beginning 2025 with retail inventory levels slightly elevated. Although the inventory is high-quality, we expect it will be a headwind to our first-quarter performance. Adjusted gross margin was 50.8% in the quarter, an increase of 200 basis points as compared to 48.8% in the prior year period. The strong increase in margin was driven by several factors. Savings from optimizing for profitable growth added 90 basis points. Lower inventory management costs primarily closeouts, and obsolescence added 90 basis points. Supply chain efficiencies, including fixed-cost absorption added 90 basis points and foreign exchange and other factors added 60 basis points. These gains were partly offset by an 80 basis point negative mix impact as we wrap accretive benefits associated with the Barbie movie in the prior year and cost inflation which had a 50 basis point impact in the quarter. For the full year, adjusted gross margin increased 340 basis points to 50.9%. The increase was primarily driven by supply chain efficiencies, cost savings, lower inventory management costs, deflation, and other factors, which more than offset the prior year benefit associated with the Barbie movie. Moving down the P&L, in the fourth quarter, advertising increased 10% to $257 million as part of our plans to shift spending into the latter part of the year. Adjusted SG&A increased 2% to $418 million, primarily due to higher compensation expenses, partly offset by savings from the optimizing for profitable growth programs. For the full year, advertising decreased 3% to $507 million. Adjusted SG&A for the full year increased 5% to $1,493 million. Adjusted operating income in the fourth quarter was $161 million compared to $147 million, an increase of 10% driven primarily by higher gross margin. For the full year, adjusted operating income increased 15% to $738 million with adjusted operating income margin expanding 190 basis points to 13.7%. Adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter was $249 million compared to $234 million, an increase of 6%. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA increased 12% to $1,058 billion. Adjusted EPS in the fourth quarter was $0.35 compared to $0.29 in the prior year, an increase of $0.06 or 21%. For the full year, adjusted EPS increased by $0.39 or 32% to $1.62. In addition to the operating income improvement, EPS performance benefited from higher interest income, a lower adjusted tax rate, and higher earnings from our equity method investment in Mattel 163 as well as a lower share count from our share repurchase activity. Cash flow generation for 2024 was strong. Cash from operations was $801 million compared to $870 million in the prior year. The prior year benefited from lower working capital, primarily driven by a significant inventory reduction. Capital expenditures were $203 million, including $59 million for the acquisition of a new global design center to replace a leased facility. Capital expenditures in the prior year were $160 million. Free cash flow was $598 million compared to $709 million in the prior year. Consistent with our capital allocation priorities, we repurchased $400 million of Mattel shares in 2024, bringing the total since resuming the program in 2023 to $603 million. Taking a look at the balance sheet, this was another year of improving our financial position. We finished the year with a cash balance of $1,388 million compared to $1,261 million a year ago. The cash increase reflects our 2024 free cash flow net of shares repurchased. Total debt was $2,334 million, consistent with the prior year. Our portfolio is well-positioned with no scheduled maturities until 2026. Accounts receivable were $1,003 million compared to $1,082 million, a decline of $79 million. The decline was due to foreign currency translation and a reduction in days sales outstanding. Inventory at year-end was $502 million compared to $572 million in the prior year, a reduction of $70 million. Our inventory is at the lowest level in recent years. Debt-to-adjusted EBITDA finished the year at 2.2 times, excluding the benefit of our $1.4 billion cash balance. This compares to 2.5 times a year ago. The improved leverage ratio was driven by the growth in adjusted EBITDA. We continue to generate significant cost savings. Under our optimizing for profitable growth program, we achieved cost-savings of $24 million in the quarter with $16 million benefiting cost of goods sold and $7 million in SG&A. For the full year, we realized $83 million of cost savings and are tracking ahead of schedule to achieve the program and savings target of $200 million by 2026. Turning to our guidance for 2025, we expect net sales in constant currency to increase by 2% to 3%. The key drivers of expected sales growth include continued momentum in vehicles and games, driven by Hot Wheels and UNO. In Dolls, the launch of products tied to the theatrical releases of Disney's Snow White and the second Wicked movie. In Infant, Toddler, and Preschool, the global rollout of Fisher-Price Wood, and in Action Figures the benefit of licensed movie properties Jurassic World and Minecraft. Foreign currency translation based on current spot rates is expected to have a negative impact of approximately 2 percentage points on our net sales performance. Adjusted gross margin is expected to be comparable to the prior year. Adjusted operating income is expected to be in the range of $740 million to $765 million with the increase primarily driven by net sales growth. Moving ahead, we will be guiding to adjusted operating income instead of adjusted EBITDA as we believe adjusted operating income is a more comprehensive profit metric for Mattel. The adjusted tax rate is expected to be 23% to 24% compared to 21% in 2024. Adjusted EPS is expected to be in the range of $1.66 to $1.72 compared to $1.62, an increase of 2% to 6%. As Ynon said, this includes the anticipated impact of new U.S. tariffs on China, Mexico, and Canada imports announced on February 1 and mitigating actions we plan to take, including leveraging the strength of our supply chain and potential pricing. The guidance is also inclusive of increased investments in our digital games self-publishing business to drive long-term growth, which are reflected in SG&A and in line with our capital allocation priorities to invest in organic growth. We continue to improve productivity and expect to achieve $60 million in additional cost savings during 2025 through our optimizing for profitable growth program. Free cash flow is expected to be approximately $600 million. Reflecting confidence in our strategy to create shareholder value, we are targeting $600 million of share repurchases in 2025, subject to market conditions. Together with the $400 million repurchased in 2024, this will fully utilize our total $1 billion authorization in just two years. The benefit of share repurchases is reflected in our EPS guidance. The guidance considers what the company is aware of today, but remains subject to market volatility, unexpected disruptions, including additional regulatory actions impacting international trade such as tariffs and other macroeconomic risks and uncertainties. In closing, we had a strong fourth quarter and exceeded expectations for the year on our key priorities to grow profitability, expand gross margin and generate free cash flow, and continued to strengthen our balance sheet. We look forward to growing the top and bottom line in 2025 as we execute our strategy. And with that, I will turn it over to the operator and we'd be happy to take your questions.