Good morning, everybody, and thanks for joining us. I'd like to start this morning's discussion by going back to our company priorities that I laid out a year ago. I spoke then about the season our business was in. Our team was focused on executing a plan to pay down debt, improve the balance sheet, capture the presidential election year opportunity in the local media division, and restore high margins to the Scripps Networks division. I'm very pleased with the tremendous progress we've made in executing this plan. In one year, we have paid down debt and reduced our leverage ratio by nearly a full turn. We are improving our balance sheet. This quarter, we delivered our highest Scripps Networks margin in more than two years at 32%. We captured record political advertising revenue to end 2024, we have deepened existing Scripps sports partnerships and created meaningful new ones. And to start this year, our first quarter results beat expectations across the board, due to strength in networks revenue, especially for Connected TV, and due to strong expense control across the enterprise. The priorities I described last year remain very important for us today. And now investors should see the track record of significant progress against each of them. Most importantly, what we have accomplished over the last year has set us up well to move successfully through the company's next season. Not far ahead, we see the prospect of local broadcast industry consolidation that will drive growth by finally allowing us to deepen our presence in our local markets, building upon the strong relationships we already have with viewers and advertisers to create even greater shareholder value. With significant efficiency, we believe financial growth through our existing businesses is just around the corner. The basis for this opportunity is the deep local and national relationships we have across this country. Specifically created through our local news, live sports, and audience and advertiser relationships. We produce the news and information that connects people to their communities, that they depend upon, and that audiences seek out across multiple platforms to help them make sense of the world. And, of course, equally critical, businesses from Wall Street to Main Street rely on our programming as a trustworthy vehicle for their messaging. At Scripps specifically, I'm very proud that our news teams have recently been recognized with a wide range of prestigious journalism awards for reporting that serves our communities and our country. Our Scripps News Network, which is carried within our local news as well as on most streaming platforms, has received awards this spring for its investigative work from the DuPonts, the Gracys, IRE, National Headliners, and the Deadline Club. Scripps News also was just nominated for an amazing eight national Emmy Awards. On the local news side, our investigative teams in Phoenix and Nashville have recently won DuPont's, national headliners and just announced last week prestigious Peabody Awards. One for each of those stations. The National Association of Broadcasters awarded Scripps itself with its 2025 Service to America award for our company's comprehensive coverage, and disaster relief efforts in Florida following Hurricanes Helene and Milton last year. These awards recognize work that represents the very best of what journalism can be, whether it is topics such as fentanyl abuse, mass shootings, hate groups, policing, natural disasters, and severe weather, or the war in Ukraine, our news programs are providing life-saving, and life-changing information to our audiences. They look to us to make their lives better and their communities richer. In turn, their connection to us is an asset we can and will actively strengthen to grow. In addition to our news programming, our Scripps sports growth strategy is building real value in our existing local station and national network assets through live sports. Our local stations strengthen the connections we have with audience and advertisers. Tapping into the passion sports fans have for their local teams with our full season team partnerships. Right now, our viewers are rooting on the Florida Panthers and the Vegas Golden Knights in the final eight of the National Hockey League playoffs. It's not only fans who are taking notice of the way we're bringing local sports to broad TV. This week, Nevada's US senator Jackie Rosen highlighted the Scripps Sports and Vegas Golden Knights partnership, describing the benefit of our free over-the-air broadcast and other approaches to serving the local fan base. Beyond the relationships we have with NHL teams, we recently announced a new broadcast partnership with the WNBA's very popular Las Vegas Aces, beginning this month. And it's possible we'll have additional announcements to come. Each new relationship is a core revenue growth opportunity for the local At our recent Scripps Networks upfront event at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, the home of the WNBA's New York Liberty, we emphasize the strong cultural connection our nation has with women's sports. And how Scripps is not just participating, we're leading this movement with our WNBA and NWSL franchise nights. The event was also an opportunity for us to unveil our two newest women's sports properties for ION. The SI women's games, our partnership with Sports Illustrated, will entertain audiences with six nights of tournament play in an Americas versus the world format. The competition will take place this fall and is attracting the very best athletes to compete live in basketball, volleyball, flag football, tennis, gymnastics, and combat sports. A few weeks later, we'll broadcast the Fort Myers tip-off women's college basketball tournament. To help us take even greater advantage of the advertising demand we're experiencing women's sports inventory. We targeted these events in the fourth quarter, after the WNBA and NWSL seasons have ended. Live news and sports aren't our only programming genres, they are certainly the foundation for the connection we have with Americans nationally and in our local markets. There is no question that our service to community and Main Street has been threatened by outdated government regulations that have made it nearly impossible for us to compete on a level playing field with the big diversified media companies and big tech. It feels like we finally have the support of a federal communications commission that understands the valuable role we play in local markets. And the credibility we have that is unreplicated by any other source of local news and information. We welcome the opportunity to rebalance the business through regulatory relief, which will give us more operating leverage. With that, we will better serve our local audiences and advertisers as well as the shareholders who benefit from those deep connections. Operator, we are now ready for questions.