Thank you, Justin, and good morning. Performance across our portfolio steadily improved each month during the quarter, resulting in comparable hotels total revenue of $311 million, up approximately 19% to first quarter 2022 and 10% to first quarter 2019. Seasonally adjusted continued strength in leisure demand and recovery in business traveled during the quarter enabled us to achieve comparable hotels RevPAR of 109 dollars a 19% increase over first quarter 2022 and a 6% increase over first quarter 2019. Comparable hotel's ADR for the quarter was $152, 11% ahead of first quarter 2022 and 9% ahead of first quarter 2019. Comparable hotel's occupancy was 72%, up over 7% to 2022 and down only 2% to 2019, our strongest occupancy performance relative to 2019 since the onset of the pandemic. April started out with a softer week leading into the Easter holiday. But subsequently rebounded well with Tuesday occupancies even approaching 90% in the following weeks. For the month, preliminary comparable results for April show continued strength in demand with occupancy of approximately 77% in line with 2022 and 5% shy of April 2019. ADR growth for the month of April was up approximately 5% as compared to 2022 and 9% as compared to 2019. Occupancy and ADR grew sequentially each month during the quarter reflective of continued strength in leisure demand, a meaningful recovery of business travel, and the transition towards our seasonally stronger months. January, February, and March weekend occupancies were 67%, 78%, and 84% respectively. Weekday occupancies grew significantly from 62% in January to 71% in February and then 77% in March. Mid-week occupancies have continued to strengthen in the latter part of April further bridging the gap to 2019 with continued strength in shoulder and weekend leisure demand. In terms of room night channel mix, brand.com bookings increased from 39% during the fourth quarter to 40% in the first quarter. OTA bookings declined from 12% in the fourth quarter to 11% in the first quarter. Property direct bookings remained strong at 26%, a testament to the continued efforts of our property and management company sales team. And lastly, GDS bookings increased from 16% for the fourth quarter to 17% in the first quarter, showing continued improvement in business travel demand. Looking at first quarter same store segmentation, far continued to be elevated to 2019 levels at 34%. Other discounts decreased slightly to 27% in the quarter, but remained elevated to 2019. Group was up slightly to the fourth quarter at 15%, meaningfully higher than the first quarter of 2019, and the negotiated segment was 18% of our mix. Turning to expenses, total payroll per occupied room for our same-store hotels was just under 39 dollars for the quarter, in line with the fourth quarter, but up 12% and 14% to first quarter 2022 and 2019, respectively. Higher wages for full and part-time employees, training costs, and higher utilization of contract labor, continued to impact comparisons to prior years and act as an offset to productivity gains resulting from adjustments and brand standards. While we anticipate wages will remain elevated relative to pre-pandemic levels, we have seen the rate of growth moderate and believe we have opportunity to improve efficiency as turnover stabilizes and we are able to reduce recruiting and onboarding costs as well as reliance on contract labor. We will continue to balance productivity initiatives with our efforts to uphold a positive work environment conducive to attracting and retaining top talent. These efforts better position us to support the high levels of service, cleanliness, and maintenance necessary to sustain rate growth and maximize the long term profitability of our sets. Strong rate growth and a focus on cost controls in a challenging labor and inflationary environment enabled us to achieve first quarter comparable adjusted did hotel EBITDA of approximately $107 million, up 21% to 2022 and 4% to 2019. First quarter comparable adjusted hotel EBITDA margin was strong at approximately 34%, up 60 basis points to 2022 and down 190 basis points for the first quarter 2019. As we have stated on past calls, we believe that long-term margin expansion for the industry and full our portfolio will be largely conditioned on our ability to grow rate. While we expect a portion of our recent expense growth to be temporary, driven by elevated employee recruiting and onboarding costs and short-term increases in our use of contract labor, we anticipate continued near-term pressure on wages and other operating expenses. First quarter adjusted EBITDAre was $95 million, up 22% to the same period in 2022 and down 5% to 2019. MSFO for the quarter was approximately $79 million, up 24% compared to the first quarter of 2022 and down 7% compared to the first quarter of 2019. Looking at our balance sheet, as of March 31st, 2023, we had $1.4 billion in total outstanding debt, approximately 3.3 times our trailing 12 months EBITDA, with a weighted average interest rate of 4.3%. Total outstanding debt, excluding unamortized debt issuance cost and fair value adjustment, is comprised of approximately $290 million in property level debt secured by 15 hotels and approximately $1.1 billion outstanding on our unsecured credit facilities, including the remaining $50 million term loan availability, which was drawn down in January 2023. Our weighted average debt maturities are 4.4 years. At the end of the quarter, we had cash on hand of approximately $6 million and availability under our revolving credit facility of approximately $610 million. During the quarter, we repaid in full four secured mortgage loans for a total of approximately $37 million, increasing the number of hotels in our portfolio to 205 out of 220. Also during the quarter, a $100 million swap expired and we entered into two new $50 million swap. At the end of the quarter, 78% of total debt outstanding was fixed or hedged. Valuable swap agreement and most importantly low overall leverage levels help mitigate the impact of the current interest rate environment. Shifting to our outlook, given limited visibility into future performance due to short-term booking windows and elevated macroeconomic uncertainty, we have not adjusted guidance. Though first quarter performance for our portfolio was at the higher end of our internal projection. Our outlook continues to reflect a broader range of comparable hotel's RevPAR change and other key metrics for 2023 and anticipate that the lodging industry recovery will be impacted by macroeconomic headwinds in the latter portion of the year though topline performance for April remained strong and forward bookings continue to be elevated to pre-pandemic levels. While we have limited visibility based on the current booking window, we are encouraged by recent trends and the strength of fundamentals for our business, which if sustained, would put us in a position to perform at the high end of our guidance range. We will continue to assess guidance in context of actual performance for our hotel and changing consensus views related to the broader economy. As has been the case in the past, we expect RevPAR growth for our portfolio to generally align with actual growth rates for our brands and chain scales. As a reminder, for the full year, we expect net income to be between $165 million and $209 million. Comparable hotel's RevPAR change to be between 3% and 7%. Comparable hotel's adjusted hotel EBITDA margin to be between 35.3% and 36.9%, and adjusted EBITDAre to be between $420 million and $457 million. Our differentiated strategy has proven resilient through economic cycle. As we move through 2023, we are confident we are well-positioned for any macroeconomic environment. Our balance sheet is strong with ample liquidity, which we intend to use opportunistically to pursue accretive opportunities. Our assets are in good condition with recent dispositions and capital investments ensuring that we maintain a competitive advantage over other products in our market. And the fundamentals of our business continue to be sound with favorable supply dynamics allowing us to benefit from continued strength and improvement in demand. And that concludes our prepared remarks. Justin and I will now be happy to answer any questions that you may have for us this morning.