Thanks, Ben, and good morning, everyone. My comments today will focus on first-quarter performance but more importantly, the successful trends we're seeing that underpin our Alaska Accelerate strategy. In the first quarter, total revenues reached $3.1 billion, up 9% year over year on capacity growth of 3.9%. Unit revenues finished strong, up 5%. First class, premium class, and importantly, main cabin all delivered positive unit revenues year over year. Loyalty continues to show strength. We generated $550 million in cash remuneration in Q1 from our co-brand cards, up 12% year over year. Importantly, new cards across the Alaska and Hawaiian networks increased 26%, with flown segments by our elites up 34%. These statistics demonstrate the power of our combined network and the incredible value that accrues to guests enrolled in our loyalty programs. Turning to premium, our revenues grew 10% and represent approximately 34% of our total revenues. Our continued investment in premium cabins is coming to life. By July of this year, 84 of our 900s and Dash 9s will have been retrofitted with six more premium class seats, with all 59 aircraft completed by year-end. In the next several weeks, we will receive our first three MAX 8s configured with 61 seats, including four more first-class seats. The conversion of our existing 59 800s into the same configuration begins this summer as we look to improve guest comfort while reducing costs and increasing revenues. Taking a step back, more than 200 of our Boeing 737 aircraft will have additional premium seats by the summer of 2026, and that's without removing any seats from these aircraft. This will add 1.3 million first and premium class seats per year and bring our premium seat mix to 29%, further strengthening our position in what we believe is a long-term driver of guest satisfaction and revenue and well-suited to our network's long stage length. Our synergy and revenue initiatives are on track despite near-term macroeconomic volatility. I want to share with you three leveraged commercial initiatives that illustrate Alaska Accelerate is working and why this deepens our conviction in our positioning over the next several years to deliver results. In Seattle and Portland, where we have leading market shares and the number one brand preference, our scheduled banking strategy is yielding significant positive results. We are increasingly more relevant to more guests and driving more connecting traffic through these two hubs. In the first quarter, connecting passengers were up 15% in Seattle compared to last year, and we see similar trends as we look forward. Our banking schedule in Portland rolled out this month, and connecting bookings for May and June are up more than 200%. In Hawaii, our recently acquired Hawaiian Airlines operations are producing strong results, including West Coast to Hawaii and Neighbor Island flying as we unlock the power behind a combined network, better utilization, and more connections. Unit revenues of our Hawaiian Airlines assets were up 9% year over year, nearly twice that of the system average. And not surprisingly, as a premium leisure market, we saw strength in premium revenues that were up 17%. Furthermore, we're continuing to grow our loyalty with State of Hawaii card acquisitions, up nearly 40%, making it one of our highest percentage growth markets. And as Ben mentioned, Hua Kaiba Hawaiian memberships for our exclusive Hawaii resident travel program are up 90% since December, and we now have well over 200,000 members in just five months since launch. In San Diego, a key focus market for us, we just announced a 30% increase in flights starting this fall, including new nonstop service to Chicago, Denver, and Phoenix. With these investments, we will have the highest network utility in San Diego by a wide margin and offer nonstop service to 44 destinations, 26% more than any other carrier. Credit card growth has surpassed our San Diego capacity growth, which is evidence that our network investments are driving outsized loyalty. In fact, San Diego now has the highest average card spend of any city we serve within the state of California. Our product and offerings are well-suited for San Diego, and we are excited to see San Diegans respond positively to our continued expansion and differentiated premium service. Now turning to our outlook. We expect our capacity to be up approximately 2% to 3% in the second quarter. Importantly, this growth is all driven by our Hawaiian Airlines assets, which are performing exceptionally well. Hawaiian asset growth is slated to be up double digits as we implement network changes and increase utilization, while our Alaska assets are not expected to grow at all this quarter. We still expect our full-year capacity growth to be approximately 2% to 3%. That said, we are currently evaluating certain off-peak capacity adjustments this fall as we continue to monitor the demand environment. Unit revenues are expected to be flat to down low single digits in the second quarter. Overall bookings have stabilized as we look forward, albeit at lower yields than originally planned. Hawaii continues to book well, with flat to positive loads and yields despite double-digit increases in capacity. Managed corporate revenue, after posting a record January, ended the quarter up 3% and has also stabilized. We've seen material improvements from two of our largest accounts in the last several weeks after a meaningful step back in February and March. Total forward bookings are up low single digits, improved from where they seemed to have bottomed out in March. Although the year has not started off as we'd envisioned, we remain focused on building scale, relevance, and loyalty through our commercial initiatives for long-term success. Our revenues are more diversified than ever, and this will only continue to grow as we execute our plan over the coming years, adding strength and resiliency to Air Group. Our yields, loyalty, traffic, and revenue growth all point to a strong foundation that will bring additional revenue upside as the environment further stabilizes and ultimately recovers. And with that, I'll pass it over to Shane.