Thanks, Jason, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to start by sharing that the advertising momentum we saw begin to build in the fourth quarter has continued as we move through the first quarter. That's true across both our operating segments from Local Media core advertising to several of our national network revenue streams. This morning, I will give you color on our local core advertising categories for Q4 and Q1 and then discuss the trends we are seeing in the in national advertising with Scripps Networks. Then I'd like to look ahead to this season's upfront, which will be upon us very quickly, and we'll wrap up with our political outlook. In Local Media for fourth quarter, we saw our top five categories end up higher year-over-year. The top performer was automotive, up 9%; followed by home improvement, up 8%; and the media and communications category, up 6%. Also notable with services, our largest category, which was up 3%. That is the first quarter services has finished up year-over-year in five quarters. Moving into the first quarter. The services category is up quarter-to-date as our automotive, home improvement and retail. We see continued momentum as we move through this quarter and are optimistic about a solid finish. Turning to Scripps Networks. The fourth quarter saw us begin to build back of some of the direct response advertising dollars that had declined as inflation spiked in recent quarters, and easing of inflation has brought back DR advertisers who are reliant on tapping consumers' discretionary income. Demand is up, and therefore, so our ad rates. As you know, the entire national advertising marketplace was challenged by last year's weak upfront, which was down 10%. For Scripps, the upfront typically lays in a nice foundation, 30% or so of first quarter dollars. We're making up ground with our aggressive tactics to drive rate in DR and scatter, and that accounts for the momentum you see in our first quarter guide. In fact, scatter pricing is up more than 35% over upfront pricing. Connected TV revenue has continued to be strong for Scripps Networks. 2023 saw a year-over-year increase of nearly 70% after backing out the impact of the low-margin programmatic products we are discontinuing. Looking ahead, we're expecting more than 45% growth in our connected TV revenue for first quarter. And for the full year, we are guiding to more than 40% increase in CTV, again, after removing the programmatic product to show the extent of organic growth. We're benefiting from continued audience growth as Americans seek out new options for ad-supported free TV, and we continue to expand our distribution within the marketplace. In fourth quarter, we launched ION on Pluto, and it quickly grew to be the number one network on its entertainment tier. Likewise, ION was named by Google TV as one of the most watched live channels of 2023. ION is the only broadcast network available in the fast marketplace, which is a premium programming lineup that includes top-rated procedurals and live sports. If the analysts are correct in describing fast as the new cable, then ION and the Scripps Networks are exceptionally positioned for more CTV revenue growth. I want to talk now about our aggressive approach to selling the upfront this coming season and why we expect significant -- significantly improve our outcome. This year, under the direction of our new Chief Revenue Officer, who came to us from NBCU, we are taking a much more aggressive stance. We've scheduled our upfront for April 9, a month ahead of the large conglomerates' in-person events. We are expecting several hundred buyers to attend. The new approach is commensurate with the stronger position we hold as a result of our expansion into live sports, the most valuable content genre for linear TV. Scripps Sports and our partnership with the WNBA and the National Women's Soccer League are the foundation for recasting ION into an entertainment destination for younger and more diverse audiences of scale, which is more attractive than ever to advertisers. Our national sports sales efforts are drawing new premium advertisers to ION and other Scripps Networks brands across all time periods. Sports advertising is serving as the tip of the spear for scatter market advertising in general. To that end, we are focused on growing our base of regular advertisers drawn by our sports programming and expanding into CTV into our -- and into our popular entertainment brands, with a specific focus on multicultural. In addition to the lift from sports, we are seeing rating successes that also position us well to benefit as the ad market recovers. In fact, the Scripps Networks are the only national entertainment portfolio showing year-over-year growth in the first quarter, both in prime and total day. We are delivering 7% more households and 5% more total viewers than at the same time last year. This growth is separate and in addition to the audience growth and momentum we see -- we are experiencing on CTV. I'd like to conclude by giving you color on our political ad revenue opportunity for 2024. As you know, each race, each market and each election year are different. Spending is determined by where the toss-ups are taking place and where the national parties and packs put their ad dollars to work. What we know for sure is that the ecosystem of spending will be larger than ever. And we know that local broadcasters will continue to take the lion's share of that spending. Ad Impact puts the total election spend at $10.2 billion compared to $9 billion in 2020. And the firm says 52% of the advertising spend will go to local broadcasters compared to 48% last time. For Scripps, Jason mentioned, our clearest line of sight now is a range of $210 million to $250 million. Presumably, we're going to see the same two candidates running as in 2020, but there are a couple of new factors to think about here. One, Biden support is not what it was in 2020; and two, much of the money Trump has raised is going to his legal defense, not to its campaign. So while experts say there will be a greater level of fundraising for this cycle, it won't necessarily be spent on the presidential race. The states where Scripps does expect to benefit from presidential election spending are Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin and Michigan. Turning to the U.S. Senate races. Scripps has local stations in seven competitive states, all of which have Democrats defending their current seats. Montana is a big one with Senator Jon Tester. We're already seeing significant orders coming into Montana, where Scripps commands strong market share across the state. We're also well positioned in Ohio with two big ABC stations, and in Wisconsin, Maryland, Michigan and Arizona, which also are projected to have tight Senate races with national money pouring into support parties' candidates. In Nevada, our Las Vegas stations will benefit from both a contested Senate race and being in a presidential swing state. We have no contested governors' races this cycle and fewer competitive house races because of gerrymandering and redistricting efforts nationwide. However, another area of opportunity that could be beneficial is the ballot referendums in some of our bigger states, including Florida. It's estimated that up to seven states could have controversial ballot issues. One such measure in Ohio last fall helped to drive our over performance with political for the year. So we'll be watching to see whether those issues make it on to the ballot in key states this summer. Before I turn it over to Adam, I'd like to thank Scripps employees for their hard work and perseverance during an especially demanding time. A year ago, the company began a significant reorganization. In addition to realizing meaningful cost savings, we have made many changes to the way that we do business. We have acted with urgency and rethinking the best ways to serve our audiences and our advertisers and to create new value for the enterprise. While necessary, the changes haven't been easy, and I credit our resilient employees for making it work. And now here's Adam.