Thank you, Ben, on this really lovely day here at the World Trade Center, and thank you to everyone joining us for our earnings call. Stagwell delivered strong results to start the year, firmly in line with our expectations, and with another record-breaking net new business quarter indicative of the strengthening position of Stagwell as the challenger network. While others in the industry are flailing about with endless reorganizations, behemoth mergers and downsizing, Stagwell is on a steady course of growth, scale and innovation. I have never been more bullish about the opportunities for Stagwell in this marketplace. Despite the noise of tariffs and the low point of the Advocacy cycle this quarter, we achieved double-digit net revenue growth ex Advocacy of 15% in Digital Transformation, 10% in Creativity, 45% in the Stagwell Marketing Cloud. We’re taking share. We have built an enviable mix of best-in-class creative transformative digital capabilities and an innovative suite of tech solutions. I would strongly encourage you to visit Stagwell’s Investor website to watch the webcast of the Investor Day we held last month to learn more about our strategy to grow, scale and innovate. Turning to our results, Stagwell delivered strong growth at four of our five principal capabilities, posting 9% total net revenue growth, excluding Advocacy in the first quarter. We have achieved this while generating $81 million in adjusted EBITDA and investing $17 million into our tech initiatives and carefully managing our labor costs. The comp to net revenue ratio for the first quarter was 65.3%, an improvement of 175 basis points over the same period in 2023, the last non-political year. Work has been done on implementing the AI tools that underpin the $80 million to $100 million efficiency drive that we announced on Investor Day. We are on track to achieve $60 million to $70 million in cost savings this year and we’ll update further on that progress in the second quarter call. Stagwell saw minimal impact from tariffs in the first quarter. We’ll continue to monitor developments as the second quarter begins, but our business, which is particularly strong with tech companies, is not directly impacted, and customers have not signaled any intention to pull back spending. Tariff mania seems overblown to us at the moment. However, reputation risk is at the top of mind of many executives as they navigate the challenges that tariffs and thorny political issues bring. Our risk and reputation unit, bringing together experts from across Stagwell’s agency, is uniquely positioned to help brands adopt their message in a rapidly evolving landscape and is winning major new assignments. The first quarter saw record net new business trends, a record in Stagwell’s history. Stagwell posted $130 million in net new business for the quarter, almost double a year ago. This figure includes key wins with PayPal, Panera, CarMax, Celsius, and Hyatt. These results bring our trailing 12-month net new business to $446 million, more than $160 million higher than the same figure at the end of 1Q 2024. These wins are highlighted by customers in the technology and retail industries, leading to strong growth in these verticals. In the first quarter, we saw technology customers increase their spend with us by 18% and retail customers by 52%. The work for these new customers is just beginning and will ramp throughout the year, particularly in the second half, giving us confidence in our guidance. We’re already transforming brand positioning of many clients. Our agencies reintroduced Starbucks to the world at the Super Bowl and launched Visa’s new global campaign at the Oscars. We’re winning bigger assignments with bigger clients that offer great opportunities to expand the relationship across our core capabilities. We now report organic growth annually as opposed to quarterly, but you can rest assured that this quarter saw positive organic growth ex Advocacy, headlined by the Digital Transformation capability that had 15% growth, but no acquisitions or dispositions. Turning to scale, we have now fully reinvested the proceeds from the concentric-like disposition into prudent M&A at accretive multiples. M&A will continue to be a key driver for us as we look to expand internationally and strengthen our capabilities while deploying capital wisely. We announced this week the acquisition of JetFuel to strengthen our experiential and shopper marketing capabilities. They’ve delivered outstanding experiences for a number of established brands like Walmart and Unilever, as well as amplifying the reach of emerging brands like C4 Energy and Mr. Beast Feastables. Our recent acquisition of German media monitoring and analytics platform UNICEPTA is also off to a good start. It recently won significant multiyear business with the European Commission and the BBC. In the Middle East, we completed the acquisition of the Create. Group at the beginning of the second quarter, but the collaborative work with the Code & Theory Network started before the deal even closed. The partnership has already delivered transformative work for clients, including work for HSBC and Condé Nast in Abu Dhabi. The Middle East is a major growth market for us, and we saw net revenue grow by more than 250% year-over-year in the first quarter. We’re also making progress in Asia, winning new mandates with Diageo, Jollibee, and Princess Cruises. This push will only be strengthened by the addition of ADK GLOBAL, which we anticipate will close in the next couple of months. And we continue to lean into the sports business as a key differentiator. We added to our sports offering with the acquisition of Gold Rabbit in Q1, and the ARound Augmented Reality experience continues to gain traction, now providing its innovative experience to the Athletics Edit at their new home in Sacramento. This sports push aligns with our programming and cons, where we will once again bring together athletes, marketers and global leaders, this time as the official sports partner of the Lions Festival. We have inspirational athletes like Carmelo Anthony, Alex Rodriguez, Sue Bird, and Jordan Childs in our lineup. Look for more partner and programming announcements in the coming weeks. Lastly, we continue to be at the frontier of innovation as a tech company’s tech company. The Stagwell Marketing Cloud saw net revenue growth, excluding Advocacy, of 45% in the first quarter. We celebrated a number of wins, including with a large U.S. specialty insurance company. QuestBrands saw a particularly strong growth, approaching 200% in the quarter, as it incorporated recent acquisition, BERA.ai. Brands like Intel, Amazon, HP, Lenovo, and PayPal are increasingly trusting the Stagwell Marketing Cloud to provide tools to augment their marketing capabilities. SMC will continue to be an investment priority for Stagwell in 2025. We invested approximately $17 million in the quarter to further strengthen our data, software, development and sales efforts. However, we anticipate the investment cadence to decline throughout 2026 as the products reach greater maturity and gain additional traction. AI continues to be front and center at Stagwell as we announce the appointment of John Kahan, a former Microsoft and IBM executive, as our Chief AI Officer at Investor Day. We continue to make progress with our internal tools like the Stagwell ID graph, a proprietary customer ID platform already delivering outstanding impact for a global CPG client and a DTC retailer. We also announced on Investor Day that we’re working with Palantir to test developing advanced military-grade targeting to enhance the utilization of Stagwell’s unique datasets. And we anticipate the machine, the content management operating system we’re developing with Adobe, will begin integrating into workflows at Stagwell at the end of the summer. The completion of these two products will mark a major advance in the capabilities of our Media and Data business and its ability to compete with the other majors. Our Digital Transformation capability, led by Code & Theory, grew net revenue 15% year-over-year in the first quarter, excluding evidence. Code & Theory debuted its new Adobe content supply chain solution at the Adobe Summit, driving personalization at scale with generative AI. We saw a tremendous interest in Code & Theory’s capabilities at the event, drawing almost 700 demos and leads. Meanwhile, Leftfield Labs developed an interactive AI demo for the Qualcomm CEO’s keynote speech at South by Southwest, showing how agentic AI can be integrated into everyday life with an on-device processing like AR glasses or wearables. Our transformative work has not gone unnoticed in the industry. Just two weeks ago at the Webby Awards, Code & Theory, Kettle, and Leftfield Labs received a total of four accolades for their work with NBC’s Election Coverage, Elf Beauty, and Hasbro. These successes come on the back of Code & Theory being named Digital Innovation Agency of the Year by Campaign. And the recognition is not just within our Digital Transformation capabilities. Four of our agencies were honored at the 2025 Ad Age Award last month. Anomaly and 72 landed on the prestigious A-list with Code named B2B Agency of the Year and Gale named Business Transformation Agency of the Year. Stagwell’s first quarter results are firmly in line with our expectations. Our new business trends give us a positive tailwind for the remainder of 2025, and we are reiterating our guidance today. The momentum in the Stagwell business is undeniable. We’re providing the best services and tools at the intersection of creativity and technology. Our customers trust us to help transform the way they interact with their customers. Our capacity to deliver strong growth, expanding margins, and an MA engine needs to be appreciated by the street. I firmly believe that Stagwell has never been stronger, and I’m optimistic about Stagwell’s trajectory and ability to reach $5 billion in revenue over the next five years. Now I’d like to hand it over to Frank Lanuto, our Chief Financial Officer, to walk through some of our financial results in more detail. Frank?