Thank you, John. Good afternoon everybody, and thank you for joining us today. You might think that, someone reporting an 84% drop in adjusted EBITDA this quarter compared to the same quarter last year might be in a foul mood. But to the contrary, as I sit here today and look at what has transpired so far this year and especially over the past seven weeks, I am ecstatic. Pick any attitude you want. Ecstatic, euphoric, all those giddy and AMC's prospects for near term and medium term improvement and recovery. In fact, I'm now more confident that I've been in more than four years about how well AMC will perform over the next 6 to 30 months. That would seem to be inconsistent with the earnings release that we just put out for the second quarter. But here are the four key reasons for my optimism. First, including monies raised during the second quarter, AMC ended the second quarter with $770 million of cash. I've said it repeatedly over the past few times in the years, cash is king and having ample cash reserves is the single best strategy for survival. Sometimes a few of our retail shareholders want to hang me by my toenails that on my watch we have brought so much cash in AMC's coffers, but I cannot say it enough times. It is so important the single smartest thing that AMC has done since 2020 was to make sure that our bank account balances were always plentiful and abundant. Despite all the rocky roads in the past several years, AMC has stayed strong. We've defied the conventional wisdom. We've continued to innovate and we've maintained our leading industry position and we did that at the exact same time that many of our competitors large and small in the U.S. or in Europe found themselves in ruin. How do we pull that off? Well in honor of the Paralympics which I might add in partnership with NBC, we have to be showing right now in our AMC Theatres in the United States, I'll use a French word. We pulled it off by having beaucoup of cash. I've said it before and I'll say it again, cash is king, cash is king, cash is king. And we ended the quarter with $770 million. The second reason, starting in mid-June, this is just a month and a half ago, the box office finally after four long tough years has shown evidence of its making a real and enduring comeback. Disney's and Pixar's Inside Out 2 which debuted in mid-June became the highest grossing animated film of all time. It was followed by an enormous success from Universal's Illumination Studios with its Despicable Me 4, Twisters Open Strong, and Disney then came right back with Marvel Smash Hit, Deadpool & Wolverine which has set all sorts of attendance and revenue records for AMC. We knew 2024 was coming. We correctly predicted and previously publicly disclosed that moviegoing in general would be weak in the early months of 2024 because production delays caused by the prolonged writers and actors strikes of 2023 with decreasing number of movies that will be ready for theatrical release early this year. But by the end of May, the impact of those 2023 Hollywood strikes was finally, for the most part, firmly behind us. And it is as clear as a bell right now that, the box office has started its big upwards climb. I'll just put one example, the June domestic industry box office was so much larger than the prior months that June was only 2 percentage points less than the box office of April and May combined. And comparing June to the earliest part of 2024, that same June, domestic industry box office was 10% more than the January and February 2024 box office combined. The strikes of 2023 had their impact, but that impact appears to be for the most part behind us. It's not surprising then, there was a surge in June box office. AMC saw a remarkable contrast in our own results, between the early quarter with The Dirt and movie releases and the end of the quarter with a record-setting movie Inside Out 2 delighting audiences in theaters. There was a soaring difference for the industry's performance and more importantly to us in AMC's performance when looking later in the second quarter versus looking earlier in the second quarter. The contrast was so vivid, the difference between the end of the quarter and the beginning of the quarter that, it was as if we were two totally different companies surrounded by two totally and completely different industry dynamics, and the proof is in the pudding. AMC capitalized on the strong June box office recovery, and in so doing AMC set an all-time monthly adjusted EBITDA record for the month of June, meaning, this was the best June result for AMC of any June in AMC's 104 year history. There were 103 Junes before this one and this was the best. And we did so across the board. We did so domestically, we did so internationally, and we did so on a consolidated basis. But the good box office does not stop with June. We have carefully and intensely studied the movie slate coming for the remainder of 2024, as well as the slates that are coming out for 2025 and 2026. Our current expectations are that, the box office turned an important quarter in June of 2024 and would be ahead. We at AMC believe, we will see sizable growth in industry-wide revenues and therefore most likely in AMC revenues in the second half of 2024. It's possible that the third quarter box office may not overtake last year's record-breaking Barbenheimer phenomena, but the fourth quarter slate really looks to easily outpace that of Q4 last year with spectacular titles this year like Warner Brothers' Joker: Folie à Deux, Universal's Wicked, Disney's Mufasa: The Lion King, and Disney's Moana 2, Sony's Venom, and Paramount's Gladiator II, among so many other big films that are coming out in the remainder of 2024. Based on the movies that we know are coming, including in 2025 and 2026, another Star Wars movies, another of Avengers movie, and another Avatar movie and so many more. A growing box office is also what we believe will be the case again in 2025 and again in 2026. Clearly, a rising box office is good news to those who are rooting for AMC to succeed, and bad news for those who root against us. As a significant portion of our expense structure consists of fixed costs, more than half of incremental revenues wind up flowing through as contribution. Clearly then a box office that looks to be rising over the next 30 months goes extremely well for the cash generation and the financial results that AMC could be reporting over the two and half years ahead. The third reason for our optimism and why it's there's such a powerful sense of confidence here and almost a relaxation compared to the stresses and pressures that we've been facing since the spring of 2020. It's our company's laser focus on driving up revenue and driving down expense that's been in evidence over the last several years. We've gotten this way both through product innovation to capture more revenues, and by our cost cutting efforts to reduce expense. As but one example of many in driving revenues, our retail shareholders floated an idea a few years back that we sell merchandise in our theaters. Three years ago, we sold next to nothing in the way of merchandise in our theaters until this recommendation came from our retail investor base. This year by comparison we should sell around $50 million of merchandise especially movie scene, collectibles and we will do so with handsome profit margins. Here's the other statistic that drives home the point of our laser focus on becoming more efficient. AMC's June 2024 adjusted EBITDA was higher than AMC's June 2023 adjusted EBITDA. But that occurred despite the fact that the box office in June ‘24 was actually 3.6% lower than the box office in June 2023. And even more dramatic, our June 2024 adjusted EBITDA was higher than the June 2019 adjusted EBITDA pre-pandemic despite the fact that the 2024 box office was approximately 12% lower in June of 24 than it was in June of 2019. And the summary of it all that continues to support our proposition that we are more innovative than ever before while being more lean than ever before is that often our contribution to overhead per patron, this is our contribution per head can be as much as 50% more now than it was five years ago, a 50% improvement in our profit per head. So what that means because we're bringing in more per head, we don't actually need for movie theater attendance to rise all the way back up to pre-COVID levels for us to generate pre-COVID levels or maybe even more than pre-COVID levels of adjusted EBITDA. And finally, the fourth reason our confidence levels are so high. Just last week, we announced that, AMC completed several transformative capital market transactions that took up to $2.45 billion of our debt previously due in 2026 and extended the maturities to 2029 and 2030. This was an enormously complex effort, but one that will have profound positive impact on AMC. The years 2029 and 2030 are a long way away. We have years and years of additional breathing room before them to further build, grow, and strengthen our company. For full disclosure and complete transparency, we did not move all of our debt that was due in 2025 or 2026 to 2029 and 2030, which remains that is still due in 2025 or 2026 in my view is de minimis compared to the previous amounts due and we believe it's thoroughly and entirely manageable. I cannot even begin to count the number of nervous nellies, bloggers and journalists who are agonizing in the press about our looming debt repayment obligations just 20 months from now prior to this debt refinancing, and they were just over and over again, where we look predicting our demise in '25 or '26 as a result of the debt payment that until last week was owed 21 months from now. Perhaps that's what they believe, perhaps they were spurred on by the short-selling community who had every financial incentive in the world to sow seeds of doubt about AMC's viability, there's no way of knowing for sure. But in any case, it does not matter now, because so much of our debt has been pushed so far out into the future, it's no longer an issue. With this debt refinancing and our other capital markets actions, this management team has demonstrated our confidence in buttressing our balance sheet at AMC. Needless to say, there are still further lines here at AMC and we have numerous other thoughts and ideas about how we can further reduce some of our debt or further improve the term surrounding our debt along the pathway between now and 2029 and 2030. This debt refinancing is an accomplishment of the highest order. One of the most important things that AMC will get done all year long in 2024. So it would be an error, an absolute error if on behalf of myself personally and on behalf of our company, if I failed to express my gratitude and the gratitude of AMC to our lenders who work so constructively with us on this endeavor. Make no mistake, AMC's lenders just gave our company a strong vote of confidence, as to their view of the likelihood of AMC's long-term success and we're grateful to them for that. In summary, my comments this afternoon are simple and straightforward. The 2023 strikes impacted a number of movie titles early in 2024 and somewhat crushed our profitability January and May. But lookout world, June and July were decidedly different. And we believe the rest of 2024 and all into 2025 and all into 2026 also should be decidedly different. The power of our extending our financial runway for many years into the future combined what we believe is a multiyear slate of blockbuster movie releases immediately ahead of us sets the stage for continued recovery at AMC. Now it does go without saying that we cannot just declare a win today and take a victory lap today. We still have to implement and execute very well between now and the end of this year, beyond the end of next year, by the end of the year after that. But even with that statement that we have to do our jobs well and we continue to have to excel and be on the ball every step of the way. Today, as we sit here right now, we are more confident than ever in our ability to ensure that AMC will thrive as both our company and our industry continue to rebound. With that as introductory remarks, I'm going to turn the call over to our CFO, Sean Goodman to give you more detail on our results.