Hello everyone. I’m kicking off with a summary of our second quarter performance on Slide 3. Revenue declined 2.1% year-over-year, mainly driven by residential business. Residential broadband customer net losses were $40,000 for Q2 which with similar market dynamics to what we’ve seen in the last few quarters, but with some incremental pressure coming from normal seasonality which we’ve not seen in a couple of years due to the pandemic. Q2 adjusted EBITDA declined 8.8% year-over-year with a margin of 40.9% reflecting both the revenue decline and higher OpEx to drive future growth. Free cash flow remains robust generating $191 million in Q2 and about $400 million year-to-date even with the elevated levels of investment to accelerate our fiber rollout and new-build activity. Our Optimum fiber network deployment has meaningfully accelerated rolling out at a faster pace than we’ve ever achieved with as many incremental fiber passing added in Q2 and the entire prior year of 2021. At 1.6 million total fiber passings we are very much back on track with our long-term fiber build plan. In the quarter we surpassed 100,000 fiber customers and expect to continue to grow at an accelerated pace. With the launch of multi-gig speeds we are now positioned as the fastest fiber broadband provider in the New York tri-state area. Our Optimal mobile business also saw significant accelerations of cyber growth reaching more than 200,000 lines with attractive promotional offerings for Optimal broadband customers. Lastly, we’ve rebranded Suddenlink to Optimum unifying telecommunications brands under one powerful national Optimum brand, which will ensure consistency and simplification in all of our marketing, offers an experience. And we continue to rapidly expand our sales distribution channels including the opening of seven more Optimum stores across the country. We have begun to see the benefits of our reinvestment strategy and we’re extremely focused on executing on all of our key growth initiatives, which we expect to improve our overall customer growth going forward. Slide 4, shows our revenue trends in more detail. Total reported revenue in Q2 declined 2.1% year-over-year, mainly due to the trends in our residential business which declined 3%. Total revenue was down 1.9% excluding about $5 million of prior-year air strand revenue. To remind you our backhaul contract with T-Mobile was terminated at the end of last year. This is resulting in a loss of about $120 million of air strand revenue this year when comparing to 2021. With about a $110 million of this in the second half of the year coming out of our Business Services division including $75 million in Q3. Business Service revenue in Q2 was flat down 1.1% year-over-year on a reported basis, but grew 1.3% excluding this air strand revenue. Last, news and advertising grew 1.1% in Q2 as trends here are normalizing. Turning to Slide 5 and Q2 customer trends in the residential business. We reported net loss of 48,000 residential customer relationships and a broadband net loss of 40,000. Recall the second quarter is normally seasonally weaker for Suddenlink because of its exposure to University towns. The difference Q1 and Q2 this year of about 26,000 broadband customers is exactly in line with our four years average variation between these two quarters prior to the pandemic across 2016 to 2019. In other words, the underlying performing of the business suggests we are yet to see a full benefit in pick up from our growth investments, but we are confident this will come as we remain full steam ahead on our various initiatives. We also continue to see lower level of market activity and gross additions across our footprint, which we don't think is unique to us. Clearly fixed wireless broadband is taking some of the growth and switchers out of the market in the past couple of quarters with more aggressive promotions and there are some incremental pressure from fiber over builders. Although visibility remains lower than normal. We are still confident that we will return to broadband customer growth with our accelerated fiber rollout, multi-gig services and new-build activity complimented by more attractive mobile bundles, expanded sales distribution channels and improved customer service. Slide 6 is a recap of our longer term fiber targets, where we are still on track to bring a 100% fiber broadband delivering multi-gig speeds to more than two thirds of our entire footprint over the next four years, targeting a total of 6.5 million fiber to the home passings by the end of 2025. Given our more reliable fiber network service, we expect to drive higher gross additions and reduce churn as well as reduce longer term maintenance and technical service costs. When comparing the experience of broadband customers on our fiber network to that of customers on our HFC network, we are now seeing 80% NPS improvements, 10% higher ARPUs and 5 to 6 percentage points of annualized churn benefits. And we're still seeing these customer metrics improve every quarter, which is evidence of our fiber strategy really paying off. In June Optimum introduced symmetrical 2 gig and 5 gig fiber internet speeds tiers for the first time, making us the fastest residential fiber internet service provider in the New York tri-state area. We start by offering these multi-gig tiers in select areas of Long Island, and we will progressively roll them out across the company's entire tri-state fiber footprint by year end. The fiber network we're building is also very scalable as we've demonstrated with this multi-gig deployment and it will continue to allow much faster upgrades in the future to enable more capacity and higher broadband speeds. Slide 7 is a current snapshot of progress with our fiber build and customer trends. You can see in the first row that we released the incremental 270,000 fiber passings during Q2 reaching approximately 1.6 million total passings, mainly in our Optimum footprint. To emphasize this is as many new fiber passings in one quarter, as we rolled out in the entire prior year, showing that our construction team is now really hitting its stride without the same types of permitting and COVID constraints that we've had over the past couple of years. We expect incremental growth on fiber passings to remain at elevated levels in Q3 following our increased investments in spring and summer months are more conducive to construction and deployment with the better weather. You can also see that our quarterly fiber customer net additions also accelerated to 23,000 in Q2, which is about double our prior quarterly run rate. As we've been doing more proactive migrations and marketing of the product more aggressively. We have reached 6.6% fiber custsomer penetration of our total FTTH passings with 104,000 fiber customers at the end of June. Note, our total customer penetration, including both our fiber and cable customers is over 50% in these areas where we have fiber coverage. So we're reinforcing our recover position with our fiber upgrades here. On Slide 8, you can say we've added also 58,000 new-build passings in Q2 and a 100,000 year-to-date putting us well on track to add approximately 175,000 passings organically this year. We are mostly edging out around the Suddenlink footprint and about one third of our total new-build activities here will be new fiber homes. We are consistently achieving over 40% penetration after the first year of expanding our network into new areas, which is correlated to new customer growth. To update our broadband subsidy applications program we received awards of 24,000 homes year-to-date totaling $35 million of subsidy grants. In Q2 we were awarded the grants for 9,000 homes in Louisiana and 7,000 homes in Arizona in addition to the 8,000 homes we were awarded in Arizona in Q1. We will be deploying FTTH in all the areas where we receive grants. We are very excited about the public grant co-funding as this opportunity to deliver rapid fiber coverage to unserved and underserved areas. And we're very focused on continuing to be the trusted partner for local governments to help bridge the digital divide. Slide 9 demonstrates the long runway we have to sell fiber broadband services that can support very high levels of data usage. The average download speeds customers take across our total base was just under 400 megabits per second, as of Q2, but our fiber customers are taking twice these speeds on average. Our one-gig customer penetration increased 18% in Q2, and this continues to grow every quarter. Around 45% of our customer base takes speeds of 200 megabits per second, or lower, so we still have a huge opportunity to keep driving customers to higher speeds, especially as we market multi-gig speeds on our fiber network, more broadly. Average monthly data usage for broadband only customers was 578 gigabytes in Q2 with video streaming still the biggest driver. For our highest data driving customers about 15% of our base of broadband only customers are using about more than one terabyte of data per month. Incredibly, but not unexpectedly, more than one quarter of our fiber customers are using more than one terabyte of data each month. There's no bear technology in the fiber to support this sort of structural growth trend