Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us. I'll start on Slide 4 by introducing an overview of our fourth quarter financial results. As you can see, Sinclair delivered solid fourth quarter results that met our guidance expectations in our Local Media segment, while Tennis Channel exceeded expectations across the board. As a result, we were comfortably within the consolidated guidance ranges for total revenues, adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted free cash flow. Turning to Slide 5. I wanted to highlight our strong commitment to our stakeholders through our return of free cash flow generation during the past year. In 2023, we paid approximately $65 million in quarterly dividends. During the year and up through January, we purchased $91 million of face value of debt at an average discount to par of 19%. This amount excludes our scheduled amortization payments, which allowed us to retire an additional $28 million of debt in 2023. In early 2023, we also repurchased nearly 9 million shares of our common stock. Our commitment to maximizing value for all of our stakeholders remains a top priority for the company. Turning to Slide 6. As we have stated in the past, we remain dedicated to our traditional Local Media business with the realization that the industry needs to transform due to subscriber churn and regulatory constraints. With that being said, we believe Sinclair as well as the broader industry has multiple growth drivers as we head into a presidential election year. First, we expect to see record-breaking political advertising revenues in 2024, which equates to exceeding 2020's political revenues of $350 million, which excludes the impact of the Georgia runoff. We saw 2023 political revenues trend above both 2021 and 2019 levels. and we expect the strong growth of issue-oriented political advertising in what appears to be several close Senate and House races in our footprint to accelerate this growth significantly as we get closer to this year's election. Given the lack of hypercompetitive primaries, we do expect political advertising spend to be more heavily weighted to the third and fourth quarters as we anticipate most of the spend at the presidential level will be focused on the general election. Second, our focus on high-demand differentiated local news and sports content as well as syndicated programming continues to drive strong and loyal viewership with 43% of viewer impressions across our station portfolio driven by non-network content. In addition, with nearly all of our big four traditional subscribers renewing by the end of 2024, we expect a mid-single-digit net retrans two-year CAGR growth rate from 2023 through 2025. NextGen Broadcast is becoming a reality as well. We now have 30 coverage in half of our 86 markets and over 75% of the U.S. as of January this year. Over 10 million NextGen TVs have been sold thus far, and we are excited about NextGen's future potential. And while the regulatory environment is far from positive overall for broadcasters, particularly from a relative perspective to our big tech and big media competitors, we are cautiously optimistic regarding long-term changes for a couple of industry items, including guidelines regarding the sunset of the industry's 1.0 [ph] spectrum as NextGen 3.0 spectrum is used more widely and the ability to negotiate directly with virtual MVPDs. In the interim, our focus on sales excellence drove over 3% core advertising growth in the fourth quarter, the highest growth rate in our publicly-traded peer group. Turning to Slide 7. In mid-January, we announced a global settlement with the Diamond Sports Group that eliminates all outstanding litigation claims between the two companies. Per the settlement that the court approved earlier this week, pending the finalization of certain final documents, Sinclair will pay a total of $495 million with the first $50 million expected to be due this week, which is being paid by ventures and the rest is expected to be paid as determined within 60 days. In exchange, Diamond has agreed to drop the $1.5 billion litigation against Sinclair and others. We estimate the gross amount of $495 million results in a net cost of approximately $250 million to $325 million when including tax benefits associated with the settlement, increased management fees from Diamond, and other assets. Importantly, we believe the settlement and the approval of Diamond's reorganization plan helps safeguard the future of Diamond and thus, the broader regional sports network environment. We believe the continued existence of local sports in the pay TV bundle, including being via the RSNs will be a key asset in driving rate re-bundling and the Pay TV bundle going forward. In light of this development, as well as the Disney Charter carriage agreement that we discussed during our third quarter call, it is our view that the relative value of the Pay TV bundle as compared to à la carte D2C offerings remain strong and is, in fact, improving as the environment shifts -- continues to shift in favor of the Pay TV bundle. We also believe that the recent Fox Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery Sports bundle announcement will not negatively impact us as we expect our Fox and ABC stations to be carried on the streaming platform, which would allow us to receive compensation. We look forward to continue discussions with our networks and distribution partners as to how we can add content and other value to consumers and attract more subscribers back to the value of the bundle. And speaking of value, this year's Super Bowl highlighted the value of broadcast television in the media ecosystem. With Super Bowl 58 setting a viewership record in January of this year with 123.7 million viewers, making it the most watched telecast in U.S. history with an estimated 112 million viewers on linear CBS alone, which represents the highest single audience on any one network in U.S. history. Our 30 CBS affiliate stations played a significant role in delivering the game and help to contribute to that record-breaking audience underscoring the importance of broadcast television. Now, let me turn it over to Rob to discuss our Local Media strategy.