Thanks Angela, and good afternoon everyone. Our financial performance this quarter reflects the strong execution and operational focus of our teams across Tripadvisor Group. As we continue on our multiyear journey to transition from optimizing legacy offerings to scaling strategically focused growth drivers, we have the benefit of a diverse portfolio that we're managing for growth and profitability. For the third quarter, on a consolidated basis, we delivered $532 million in revenue, flat to last year and in line with our expectations, given the anticipated headwinds in our legacy hotel meta offering, offset by healthy growth at Viator and TheFork. Our adjusted EBITDA came in at $122 million, with all three of our segments delivering profitability, which gives us confidence in how our teams have delivered and to reaffirm our full year estimates. Mike will provide more details in his section. I'd like to take this opportunity to reflect on the meaningful progress we've made and the opportunities ahead. I'll also cover how this comes together as we think about 2025, starting with the experiences category. Our ambition is to extend our leadership position in this large and expanding market with our scaled global platform and attractive financial profile. This is one of the most exciting opportunities in travel given the secular tailwinds, low online penetration and the growing recognition of experiences as the most meaningful and important part of travel. This positions experiences to grow faster than the travel industry as a whole over the foreseeable future. We still have much work to do, but with our unique assets, some of the most trusted brands in travel, sizable, high-intent audiences, the deepest source of supply online, extensive third-party distribution and the review platform of choice for operators, we're confident in our leadership position. In the Viator segment, we've been balancing growth and investment to drive scale and contribute an increasingly larger share of revenue and profit to the group. As a reminder, this includes contributions from the Viator and Tripadvisor B2C points of sale as well as our B2B offerings for operators and third-party distributors. In Q3, revenue was $270 million, growing 10% year-over-year and gross booking value, or GBV, grew 9% to approximately $1.1 billion. Adjusted EBITDA was $30 million or 11% of revenue. We believe we're still in the early innings in the experiences category, with meaningful distinct advantages to serve travelers. The Tripadvisor brand is one of the most trusted brands in travel and its largest and fastest-growing audience comes to the site to discover and book experiences. Its broad reach and position in guidance planning helps capture upper funnel travelers at the start of their planning journey. The Viator brand is well positioned to capture high intent travelers further down the funnel as the leading experiences marketplace with the most scaled source of supply and a strong foothold with US travelers. While each of these brands serves different audiences with unique products and distinct marketing strategies, the scale we've reached allows us to unlock new opportunities across product, supply data and geographic expansion that leverage our combined assets and capabilities. We've made good progress with our priority investments at Viator this year. Year-to-date, we've seen higher-than-average growth in bookings from direct and other low-cost channels, which reflects our increasing scale and our progress in building awareness beyond search. We continue to improve the products across the board, such as landing pages tailored to traffic sources that have improved the user experience and yielded conversion wins. Our effort to drive more bookings to the app is working. App bookings in Q3 grew faster than any other surface and the mix of app bookings has almost doubled since 2022. We're seeing strong and stable repeat booking growth, which combined with large cohorts of new customers that we expect to mature into repeat travelers, gives us confidence in our durable foundation for future growth. We're also increasingly leveraging generative AI to improve our product and customer experience. Not only are we using the technology to better assist customer service agents in serving travelers but we're also leveraging GenAI to provide better product recommendations that drive higher conversion and generate communications for agent follow-up. Shifting to Brand Tripadvisor, where our teams continue to work to transform the business and shift from our historical reliance on the profitable but pressured legacy hotel meta offering. This transition is reflected in Brand Tripadvisor's Q3 financial performance, with revenue of $255 million, a year-over-year decline of 12%, which was within our expectations and adjusted EBITDA of $87 million or 34% of revenue, which came in above expectations due to the timing of certain investments. Mike will discuss this further shortly. Our strategy is to address these well-known headwinds by innovating around travel planning and guidance, still one of the most labor-intensive and time-consuming parts of travel. We believe we're uniquely positioned to solve this pain point for travelers with our trusted brand, high-quality content and extensive data. And our indicators of traveler engagement with the new products we rolled out this year only strengthened our conviction. Our monthly active users, or MAUs, have stabilized and returned to growth year-to-date. And importantly, our engagement trends in monthly active members and app users have continued to improve quarter-by-quarter. We see the benefits of this growth among our most engaged users in and our channel mix, where our direct channel has added more MAUs than any other year-to-date, achieving more than 30% growth versus 2023. As I've noted in prior quarters, we continue to see our strongest performance against these metrics in the U.S. market, where we typically launch new products first, and we increasingly see fast follow markets outside the U.S. following a similar trajectory. Of course, this progress in our engagement strategy must translate to financial impact at scale. This means continuing to grow these audiences, innovating in our product and particularly in our hotels experiences marketplaces and actively managing the structural headwinds in hotel meta. We continue to shift our focus and resources to the areas where we are differentiated and have the highest conviction about future growth. Our execution will center on a few key pillars. First, we're focused on growing our mobile app, through a host of UX changes that have already resulted in higher engagement and repeat rates, evolving our trip planning feature and optimizing conversion in our hotels and experiences booking capabilities. As we continue to scale in-app hotel booking in the U.S., we're seeing higher click-through rates, 4 times better monetization per booker, and significantly higher experiences revenue and review and photo submissions versus in-app meta. Second, we're focused on accelerating experiences growth by more effectively serving the diverse global demand we see in Brand Tripadvisor's funnel. This includes improving discovery, cross-selling on hotel detail pages, and expanding supply partnerships in new categories and geographies. We're also leading with experiences when we launch new guidance features like our chat-based AI assistant on destination pages, which is designed to help travelers navigate the best of our billion-plus reviews, forum posts, and other guidance content to find the most relevant things to do. Finally, we're focused on rolling out new membership enhancing features, including rewards, promotions, and an achievement program that are driving higher conversion and meaningful uplift in member contributions. This also includes member-only capabilities like AI-powered trip planning and in-app hotel booking as well as leveraging our proprietary data to deliver more personalized cross-category recommendations to each member. Now, turning to the dining category, where we see ample opportunity for growth as evidenced in our Q3 results at TheFork, the segment's best financial performance on record. Revenue accelerated sequentially to $49 million or 17% year-over-year growth. Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was $5 million or 10% of revenue, a significant improvement from last year. This is a strong trajectory, and we're well-positioned to sustain the momentum. We have a defensible position as the largest dining reservations platform in Europe, serving both diners and operators. Our unit economics continue to improve through a combination of marketing efficiency and sales productivity that are driving healthy growth in new and repeat diners as well as our restaurant base, providing a strong foundation for the future. Continuous product improvements at TheFork have positioned us well on both the B2C and B2B fronts, each of which are delivering strong growth. For diners, our user experience, largely on app is increasingly personalized with more relevant content in AI-powered review summaries, tailored onboarding flows, and special offers, which are driving better conversion rates. We've also strengthened our B2B offering to provide more value for our restaurant operators, which is driving an uplift in ERB usage and accelerated growth. Our upgrades include AI-driven predictive analytics, better service and table views, mobile optimization, and enhanced revenue management insights. Following our recently announced Vodafone partnership to introduce new diners to TheFork, we continue to gain traction with strategic partners as a trusted dining brand with a strong consumer value proposition. We recently entered into a relationship with Mastercard, and we'll work together to provide premium restaurant experiences across Europe and preferred treatment for Mastercard cardholders utilizing TheFork pay. While this won't begin to scale fully until next year, this is a testament to our brand value and reliability in our payments technology. To further enhance this collaboration, Mastercard will also become the title sponsor of our annual event, TheFork Awards. Throughout 2024, we've delivered tangible evidence of the progress we're making across multiple categories in each of our segments, which we believe will set us up to deliver our desired financial profile going forward. This is a critical input for us as we solidify plans for 2025. While it's premature to provide specifics, I do want to take the opportunity to share some thoughts on our emerging priorities for the coming year. First, we will utilize all of our group assets and capabilities to extend our leadership in experiences, leveraging our marketing scale, brand value across geographies and B2B relationships with distributors and operators. Even with all the talk of normalized growth rates in travel, we believe this category will continue to outperform the industry with solid double-digit growth, contributing a higher mix of our overall revenue and profit and enhancing our group financial profile. Second, we expect Tripadvisor to be increasingly focused on a streamlined set of priorities, including further differentiating our brand and content around planning and guidance, driving booking growth in our experiences hotels categories, especially in-app, and enhancing our membership offering to reward engagement and drive monetization. We believe these priorities are most critical to translate our strategy into a sustainable, long-term financial profile. Third, we'll begin to build on the strong foundation at TheFork, growing both diners and restaurants, continuing to improve our products and driving diverse revenue growth across B2C and B2B, as we maintain this year's momentum, delivering growth and profitability. And finally, we'll ensure that our operating model supports our growth agenda across the group by balancing investment and profitability, including managing operating costs as we continue on our transformation journey. As always, we're monitoring what's happening on a macro level, although its future impact is difficult to predict. We continue to see healthy search data and strong consumer intent to travel and book experiences with overall stability in booking windows and average length of stay. We've observed some bifurcation of intent between higher and lower income travelers, but regardless of the fluctuations we may see periodically, I remain confident in the durability of growth in leisure travel. This is a sector that has continued to adapt, change and grow over the long term. Across Tripadvisor Group, we are well positioned for enhanced growth as we continue to build trust with travelers, innovate our offerings. And as the experiences category continues to emerge as an increasingly central and durable part of the travel budget. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mike.