Thanks, Bobby, and good afternoon, everyone. Briefly recapping the quarter, results were largely in line with our pre-announcement on April 10th. Total revenue was $912 million, 5% higher than the ‘24 quarter. Fuel expense totaled $238 million, 10% lower than the ‘24 quarter, driven by a 13% decrease in the average fuel cost, partially offset by 5% higher capacity. We generated a record 107 ASMs per gallon during the quarter, just above a 1% fuel efficiency improvement over the ‘24 quarter. Adjusted non-fuel operating expenses were $720 million, or $0.0724 per available seat mile, 8% higher than the ‘24 quarter, mainly due to lower average daily aircraft utilization related to our disciplined capacity deployment, an increase in station costs, fleet growth, and lower sale leaseback gains from two fewer aircraft deliveries. Partly offsetting these items was a lease return benefit in the quarter resulting from the extension of 14 aircraft leases that were otherwise set to be returned in ‘26 and ‘27. These lease extensions support our mid- to long-term fleet strategy. We took delivery of four A321neo aircraft and two spare aircraft engines during the quarter, raising our total aircraft fleet to 163 at quarter end. We expect to take delivery of three A321neos in the second quarter, one less than previously expected, all of which have committed sale leaseback financing. We currently expect another 13 aircraft deliveries in the second half of ‘25, all of which also have committed sale leaseback financing, along with approximately 40% of our ‘26 deliveries. First quarter pretax loss was $40 million, yielding a 4.4% loss margin, and net loss was $43 million, or $0.19 per share. Our net loss includes a $3 million income tax expense primarily relating to a non-cash valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets. We ended the quarter with $889 million of total liquidity, comprised of unrestricted cash and cash equivalents of $684 million, and $205 million of availability from our undrawn revolving line of credit. As highlighted earlier, we've significantly reduced our planned capacity for the balance of the year to address the macro uncertainty. We expect the capacity reductions to support over $300 million of combined cost reductions in capital spending deferrals over the balance of this year, which includes a mix of benefits from lower capacity and other opportunities to reduce cash outlays across the business. Most of the benefits are expected to be realized in the second half of this year, in line with the progression of the capacity adjustments. The loss of $0.23 to $0.37 per share expected in the second quarter for the guidance we provided in our earnings release, is based on approximately 228 million shares outstanding and the jet fuel curve as of April 29th, which yields an expected average all-in cost per gallon of $2.38. It largely reflects softer travel demand in April, with current booking trends suggesting demand for May and early summer travel have stabilized, and the normal lead time to align costs with capacity reductions. The guide also reflects the expected sequentially higher non-fuel costs, which are primarily related to the timing of fleet deliveries and the impact of the lease return benefit recognized in the first quarter, in addition to normal year-over-year increases directly tied to our larger fleet and sequentially higher capacity. The per share loss includes a projected tax expense provision in the range of $2 million to $5 million due to the expected recognition of a non-cash valuation allowance similar to the first quarter. With that, I'll turn the call back to Barry for closing remarks.