Thank you, Rob, and good morning, everybody. I'm excited to speak with you today and look forward to working with you and the Papa John's team as I take on this interim role. As you read in our earnings release this morning, we continue to deliver top line growth on top of significant gains over the past few years. For the first quarter, global system wide restaurant sales were $1.2 billion, up 2% in constant currency and excluding the franchisee suspended restaurants announced last year. Net unit growth primarily in international markets contributed to the higher system-wide sales. For the first quarter, North America comp sales were flat with last year's record first quarter sales. A result of a 3% growth in our company-owned restaurants, and a decrease of 1% across franchised restaurants who are coming off a strong first quarter a year ago. For added color, in the first quarter, we have lapped our largest January ever, when customers were staying closer to home due to the impact of Omicron. On a two year and three year stack, North America comps were up 2% and 28% respectively. International comps were down 6% in the first quarter as inflation continue to pressure consumer spending across markets. Similar to the fourth quarter, the challenges we faced in the UK market had a significant impact on our International segment results. First quarter comps were also impacted in Asian markets due to the Chinese New Year and the loosening of COVID restrictions. Strength in our other international markets especially in the Middle East and Spain partially offset these pressures. Total revenues for the first quarter were $527 million, up slightly from the same period last year when excluding the impact of refranchising in 90 restaurant joint venture in 2022. Now turning to margins. For the first quarter, adjusted operating income was $39 million compared with $45 million from the same period last year. The year-over-year decline was in line with our expectations as the impact of this significant commodity and wage inflation that occurred throughout 2022 has not fully lapped. In addition, higher G&A expense was driven by annual merit increases and performance based comp accruals, along with higher depreciation and amortization related to our investments in restaurants and technology support. Adjusted operating margins were 7.4%, a 90 basis point decline year-over-year, but slightly better on a sequential basis. Our teams are taking a disciplined approach to managing costs while maintaining our high performance culture and supporting our strategic growth initiatives. So let's take a deeper dive into our operating segments. In our domestic company-owned restaurant segment, food basket costs were up 4% compared with the prior year. Labor costs also remained elevated in the quarter. Together, commodities and labor costs represented approximately 200 basis points of a headwind for the domestic company-owned restaurant segment margins year-over-year. Our strategic pricing actions somewhat but not fully offset the higher costs, resulting in an approximate 150 basis point decline in restaurant level margins compared with a year ago. We expect to see further improvement in our domestic company-owned restaurant margins as our team continues to implement the Back to BETTER operational initiatives and food costs continue to moderate throughout the year. We remain focused on factors which are under our control, offering good value to our customers and running great operations. In our North America commissary segment, first quarter revenues grew by 1% year-over-year, driven by higher costs. As a reminder, our commissary arrangement with North America franchisees enables us to pass through food, labor, and fuel costs on a cost plus fixed margin basis. As a result, higher costs are slightly accretive to commissary operating income, but dilutive to operating margins. For our International Operating segment, adjusted operating come was down in the first quarter compared with the prior year. As discussed on prior calls, the UK is our largest market and the only international market where we own the commissary. Since this market is more than just a royalty screen, the challenges we are facing have a more pronounced impact on our international profits. Partially offsetting the impact in the UK was a 8% net new unit growth in our international markets when compared with a year ago. Moving on to cash flow and balance sheet. For the first quarter, net cash provided by operating activities was $41 million, up from $25 million a year ago. Free cash flow increased $7 million to $22 million reflecting changes in working capital partially offset by an $8 million increase in capital expenditures. We ended the quarter with ample liquidity, of approximately $240 million in cash and borrowings available under our revolving credit facility and a gross leverage ratio of 3.5 times. We also continued to return significant cash to our shareholders. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately 210 million in shares. In total, we have repurchased 2.5 million shares and approximately 90 million remains available for repurchase under our current authorization. We also paid $15 million in cash dividends during the quarter. Based on our strong balance sheet and positive business outlook, our board has declared it second quarter dividend of $0.42 per common share or $1.68 dollars on an annual basis. Through prudent management of our cash flows, we're able to maximize our financial flexibility and our ability to create value for our shareholders in both the short and long-term through a combination of organic growth investments, cash dividends, and share repurchases. Now to our outlook. Overall, our growth expectations remain unchanged with the long-term outlook we provided on our fourth quarter call. Consistent with our long-term guidance last quarter, we plan to grow our North American comps between 2% and 4% annually going forward. Also consistent with our guidance last quarter, in 2023, we anticipate being at the lower end of this range. From a cadence perspective, we believe North America comps will improve each quarter as we launch new menu innovations, activate targeted offerings for our most value conscious customers and execute our Back to BETTER initiatives. We anticipate our international comp sales will remain under pressure, but will improve each quarter as a macroeconomic environment evolves, including within the UK, our largest international market. We expect our adjusted operating margins to be comparable to up slightly to the level achieved in 2022 as we benefit from several tailwinds including our Back to BETTER initiatives, positive North America comps, and the benefit of 53rd Week in 2023. Offsetting these tailwinds are the investments we are making in the UK and higher G&A expenses as performance based comp ramps back up. For added color, we expect our second quarter G&A expense to be higher due to the return of our franchisee conference after a three-year pandemic hiatus. In addition, while we expect food and wage inflation to moderate over the longer-term is difficult to predict when and to what extent it will occur in 2023. Taking into consideration that first quarter share repurchases increased our debt by approximately $200 million. We now expect full year net interest expense to be between $40 million and $45 million. The increased interest expense is mitigated by the share reduction from EPS perspective. Our CapEx remains at $80 million to $90 million as we invest in technology innovation and the opening of new company stores. And finally, our tax rate is anticipated to be at the higher end of our 21% to 24% range. In summary, we continue driving value for our shareholders and setting Papa John's up for success through our menu innovation, digital enhancements, operational productivity, unit growth, and strategic capital allocation. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Rob for some final comments. Rob?