Thank you, Rob. Before we dive in, I'd like to remind everyone that we manage our business primarily based on flight profit rather than revenue, which could be influenced by a number of factors like fuel costs and landing fees, which we largely pass through, jet charter market pricing, aircraft repositioning and mix shifts between air and ground in our Medical business. Recently, we've made significant progress transitioning more and more of our Medical flights to dedicated aircraft that provide us with fixed cost leverage as we grow and are strategically based near our hospital customers. This has enabled us to improve our flight profit dollars per trip while reducing costs for our hospital customers and more importantly increasing availability with shorter call out times, which can lead to better patient outcomes. When paired with our growing fleet of Medical vehicles and new organ placement offering, we believe we've built the most cost effective and reliable end-to-end organ logistics platform in the United States. That's why even though we saw a slight sequential decrease in Medical revenues from Q3 to Q4, Medical flight profit increased sequentially over the same period. This shows us that our strategy is working. At the same time, we improved our Passenger flight profit margins by 5 percentage points in Q4 2024 versus the prior year, demonstrating our path to full year profitability in the Passenger segment, which we expect in 2025. I'll now walk through a few highlights from our business segments in the fourth quarter. We'll start with Medical, where revenue increased 48% to $32 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 versus $21.6 million in the comparable 2022 period. Approximately 45% of this quarter's growth was driven by the addition of new customers with the remainder driven by growth with existing clients as well as strong overall market growth. Industry wide, we continue to see longer distance trips versus the prior-year period as transplant centers fly farther to enable more transplants resulting in more flight hours and increasing the revenue opportunity for Blade. Medical revenue was at the lower end of our expectations this quarter. Compared to Q3 2023, we saw a slightly higher percentage of organ transports traveling ground-only, which we view as the typical ebb and flow, while our increased use of dedicated aircraft helped reduce repositioning for our hospital customers. Use of dedicated aircraft generally will slightly decrease flight hours and revenue per air trip, while flight profit per air trip will increase. As discussed earlier, we're keenly focused on flight profit performance, which exceeded our expectations. On last quarter's call, we guided towards Medical flight margins in the 18% to 19% range for Q4 2023 with continued steady improvement toward 20%-plus in the future. I'm happy to report that Q4 2023 Medical flight margin exceeded expectations at 20.1%, a 4 percentage point improvement year-over-year and a 2 percentage point sequential improvement versus Q3 2023. Our faster-than-planned adoption of dedicated aircraft and owned ground vehicles allowed us to achieve this important milestone more swiftly than originally anticipated. Medical segment flight profit was $6.4 million in the current quarter, an increase of $2.9 million or 81% versus $3.6 million in the comparable 2022 period. Medical segment adjusted EBITDA was up 58% to $2.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 versus $1.6 million in the comparable 2022 period. Looking forward in Medical, we continue to expect single-digit percentage sequential revenue growth in the coming quarters with flight margins above 20% for the entirety of 2024 and gradual improvements towards 25%-plus by the end of the year, driven by our new aircraft supply arrangements. Q4 2023 Medical SG&A was a little heavier than we expected, given startup costs associated with comps and some end of year commission catch up, driven by great performance. We're expecting slightly lower medical SG&A in Q1 sequentially followed by low-single-digit sequential growth as we ramp up TOPS and add logistics staff. As Rob previously mentioned, we're excited to announce the acquisition of eight Hawker 800 aircraft to bolster our Medical operations. In our experience, the Hawker platform is longer range and lower cost with more cargo capacity than other aircraft utilized by our competitors. This new arrangement results in both lower costs for our customers and higher margins for Blade. Based on our average utilization of these aircraft in 2023, we should see a 5 percentage points to 10 percentage point flight profit margin uplift for flights utilizing these owned aircraft, which will help us to achieve our goal of 25%-plus flight profit margins in Medical over the coming quarters. We recently signed a purchase agreement and expect to start seeing improved margins during the month of March. I'd like to emphasize that these specific aircraft are among our most highly utilized, are under capacity purchase agreements today and are strategically positioned in areas with significant demand from overlapping customers. Going forward, we will continue to assess aircraft acquisitions only in areas where we are already servicing significant customer demand. We remain committed to our asset-light model and expect the significant majority of our flying to remain with third-party owned and operated aircraft. For example, the specific owned aircraft discussed today are expected to represent only about 10% of Blade's overall flying activity in 2024. The opportunity for further margin expansion is apparent. The $21 million acquisition costs will be funded through $11.7 million in cash and $9.3 million in existing deposits with the operator. Turning to our Passenger business. In Short Distance, Q4 is always a seasonally light quarter, but we're pleased that revenue was up 14% to $10.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 versus $9.4 million in the comparable 2022 period, driven by an increase in seat volume and stronger pricing in our by-the-seat airport product and increased revenue in Europe and Canada. Blade Europe continued to be a positive contributor of flight profit this quarter and was flight profit positive for the full year 2023, meaning it covered all costs related to air and infra terminal ground transportation for our fliers. In jet and other, revenues decreased 32.4% to $4.8 million in the current quarter versus $7.1 million in the prior-year period, driven primarily by our decision to discontinue Blade 1, our seasonal by-the-seat jet service between New York and South Florida, which was a $1.7 million impact and softness in jet charter. Passenger segment flight profit increased by $0.7 million or 37% to $2.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 from $1.9 million in the same period of 2022. This increase was attributable primarily to improved pricing and utilization and our by-the-seat Blade Airport product. All of this led to a $1.1 million improvement in Passenger segment adjusted EBITDA to negative $2.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 versus negative $3.8 million in the prior-year period. Despite the solid growth this quarter, Europe is performing below our original acquisition expectations. As such, we took a non-cash impairment charge on the intangible assets associated with our asset-light aircraft operator agreement. Despite this write-down of $20.8 million next to the U.S., Europe is the largest urban air mobility market globally and is poised to be an early adopter of Electric Vertical Aircraft. This was a strategic acquisition that enjoys exclusive infrastructure, exclusivity for flying between Nice and Monaco on a by-the-seat basis and a devoted customer base that secures our leading position as we transition to EVA. We're making great progress with our newly installed management team and expect improvement in both revenue and profitability in 2024. On the corporate cost side, yet again, we were able to reduce our adjusted unallocated corporate expenses, shrinking 11.3% in Q4 2023 versus the prior-year period, which, when coupled with our flight profit growth across Medical and Passenger, led to a $2.7 million improvement in adjusted EBITDA versus the prior-year period to negative $5.2 million in Q4 2023. Turning to our guidance. We expect to be profitable on an adjusted EBITDA basis for the full year 2024 and to achieve double-digit adjusted EBITDA in 2025. To get there, we'll continue to employ the tools that led to our significant adjusted EBITDA improvement over the past year. Adjusted unallocated corporate expenses should stay near the average of recent quarters, leading to low- to mid-single-digit million dollars of savings in the current year 2024 versus 2023. In Passenger, we expect a 2 point to 3 point improvement in flight profit margin as Blade Airport builds on its first flight profit positive year to become a more material contributor to overall flight profit. At the same time, we've built enough scale and brand awareness to reduce our U.S. marketing spend. We've also realized cost savings from the finalization of our European integration. Together, we expect these items to have a low- to mid-single-digit positive impact on adjusted EBITDA in 2024 with Passenger segment EBITDA turning positive to low-single-digit millions in 2025. In Medical, flight profit margins should continue to expand towards 25%-plus by the end of 2024, driven by increased use of dedicated aircraft and the increased fixed cost leverage we're expecting from our recently acquired aircraft. This alone would result in mid- to high-single digit adjusted EBITDA improvement in 2024 based on just 2023 revenues. New customer growth could push that into the higher end of the range and would come with some additional SG&A. Though improvements will come gradually throughout 2024, we expect 25%-plus flight profit margins in Medical for the full year 2025. We expect that this margin expansion, when coupled with just moderate growth in Medical and Passenger, will get us to our adjusted EBITDA goal for 2025 and set us up for continued double-digit adjusted EBITDA growth into the future. With respect to our balance sheet, given our improving financial performance, we expect that the majority of our $166 million in cash and short-term securities as of the end of fourth quarter of 2023 will be utilized for tactical acquisitions in our Medical segment or further accretive investments in our aircraft supply base. The best is yet to come and we're excited about the years ahead. With that, I'll turn it back over to Rob.