Good morning - sorry, good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'll start on Slide 4, as I would like to begin by discussing the holding company reorganization that was approved by our shareholders in late May and which closed on June 1.\ Under the new structure, Sinclair Inc. has become the publicly traded parent of Sinclair Broadcast Group and Sinclair Ventures. SBG holds the pure-play local media assets, while a newly formed subsidiary, Syncline Ventures holds the company's nonlocal media assets. The intent is to provide the investor community with greater transparency of financial results and disclosures on the value drivers of the business, while increasing both operational and financial flexibility for creating value within the company. In addition, we are now disclosing more financial detail about the operating results at Tennis Channel, which is now a separate reporting segment as well as more information regarding management's estimates of fair market value for our non-media assets, including our investment portfolio. The reorganization will allow more transactional flexibility and transparency around the sum of the parts valuation analysis, which I will discuss in more detail shortly. Additionally, Ventures will now have more flexibility to potentially access additional financing, whether debt or equity to further grow or invest in these assets. While our pure-play focused Local Media division will continue to transform and unlock overall value for the organization. Turning to Slide 5. We remain firmly committed to the local media industry, which is our legacy and core business. However, increased competition from technology companies, streaming content providers and the networks as well as continued regulatory constraints, means that we must transform to remain relevant and to grow impressions and revenue share. We must also embrace technology, which is why we're earmarking 75 million this year for cloud technologies, automation and ad sales platforms, data distribution, yield management and a customer data platform. Due to a combination of timing and permanent cost savings, we now anticipate spending approximately $65 million on these efforts during 2023. Over the next 12 months, we intend to allocate capital to marketing services, multi-platform content community interactivity, next-gen broadcast and cloud technologies. Our next-gen broadcast plans remain a key focal point of this transformation. The migration of [indiscernible] and distributed data products will allow our industry to unlock the value of our significant spectrum holdings through new revenue and cash flow streams. And despite net leverage increasing this year, in part due to our investment in broadcast and net retrans renewal timing, we believe the changes and investments we are making will drive broadcast future returns and free cash flow leading to reduced debt over the coming years. We intend to remain keenly focused on strengthening the balance sheet as we continue to execute on our business strategies in the coming quarters. Turning to Slide 6. I wanted to provide a brief governmental update regarding several key items for Sinclair as well as the broadcast industry at large. In mid-June, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed the journalism, Competition and Preservation Act which would allow broadcasters and other news production organizations to negotiate directly with large big tech platforms for widespread content distribution. Also in June, Senator Cantwell, expressed public support calling on the SEC to initiate a process to update the definition of MVPDs to address the rise of live streaming video services and to allow direct negotiation of carriage between virtual MVPDs and broadcasters. In addition, at the annual NAB Show in May, FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel, announced an NAB-led leadership group to grow -- to work through the issues related to the broadcasting industry's ongoing transition to ATSC 3 panel for next-gen broadcast services. This should help facilitate the wind-down of the older ATSC dose standard which will open up more spectrum capacity for future services. We are pleased with all 3 of these significant governmental developments, and we look forward to working with legislators and regulators regarding these crucial issues for broadcasters over the coming months. On Slide 7, Ventures strategic path is about amplifying its approximate $1.25 billion portfolio with a focus on shifting from mostly minority owned to majority owned and consolidated growth investments. Our diversified portfolio of investment assets has delivered strong results in the past, returning an IRR of 19% over the past 10 years and our target for future investments is to have an IRR threshold goal of 15% to 20%. We look forward to sharing further developments regarding this asset portfolio in the months ahead. Turning to Slide 8. We are disclosing separate financials for Tennis Channel for the first time as part of our increased disclosure for Sinclair Ventures. During the second quarter, Denison [ph] reported $60 million in total revenue and $8 million in adjusted EBITDA. We note that there are some seasonality associated with Tennis Channel's financials, particularly on the operating expense side, largely due to production costs associated with the coverage of Roland-Garros, which occurs during the second quarter. We expect full year revenues to be in the range of $223 million to $226 million, while adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $53 million to $56 million. This includes approximately $14 million in net operating expenses to fund the growth initiatives, including direct-to-consumer, Tennis Channel International, T2 and BikoBall [ph] As seen in Slide 9, we're also presenting greater disclosure around Ventures investment portfolio, which includes nonmedia assets and excludes Tennis Channel and Compulse along with the current methodologies for calculating the fair market values of the various assets. As you can see, management's estimates of the value of these assets includes the current cash position, reflecting a total portfolio value of $1.25 billion. As a reminder, these assets have generated a 19% internal rate of return over the last nearly 10 years. During the second quarter, Sinclair made investments of approximately $6 million into the portfolio of investments and received distributions of approximately $5 million. Going forward, part of the strategy in Sinclair Ventures will be reducing our minority stake investment stakes over time and focusing more on majority investments that we can operationally and financially control. Turning to Slide 10. I wanted to highlight the current valuation discrepancy between our estimation of the fair value of our assets and our current enterprise valuation. As seen in the table, our current total enterprise value as of July 26 was $44 billion. We signed an approximate 1.25 billion valuation of the assets held in our investment portfolio, as seen on the previous slide. We have signed an approximate $1 billion valuation for Tennis Channel and Compulse based on Tennis Channel's EBITDA using a 12 times trailing 12-month multiple and a 2 times gross drilling multiple for Compulse. When combined, this yields an estimated approximate $2.3 billion fair market value for Sinclair Ventures, assigning a 7 times adjusted EBITDA multiple for our Local Media segment, which is in line with recent trading comps on an average, 8 quarter basis yields a local media fair market valuation of $5.7 billion. Taking into account the approximate $50 million of annualized unallocated corporate expenses, this yields an estimated total implied fair market value for the company of approximately $7.6 billion, suggesting a current equity discount of almost 80% with an implied share price of approximately $65. While we realize and acknowledge a current discount on our capital structure due to several issues, including some uncertainty related to the Diamond scores bankruptcy outcome, we believe the deep discount on the fair market values of our current asset remains unjustified. Management is keenly focused on closing this valuation gap as we continue to invest in both our local media and venture assets and businesses. One of the ways we expect to close this valuation gap is through the transformation of our traditional broadcast business. Turning to Slide 11. Work continues on our next-gen broadcast core network and platform. We currently expect to go live in the first quarter of next year. This network will create an interconnected platform to provide commercial services and solutions for national data distribution and represents what we believe to be the next step in the evolution of the broadcasting industry. Slide 12 highlights recent developments for NextGen broadcast. To date, we are live with NextGen broadcast in 41 markets, including recent launches in South Bend and Reno, which represent approximately 69% of the TV households in our licensed footprint. By year-end, Sinclair will have deployed NextGen in over half of our 86 markets covering 74% of our covered population. The industry has also committed to launching an advanced emergency formation pilot project to disseminate crucial information with enhanced broadcast features. We currently expect NextGen revenues to begin in 2024 as the technology grows towards BIA's midpoint forecast of $10 billion in industry revenues by 2030. I will now turn the call over to Rob for operational highlights.