Thanks, Mike, and good afternoon, everyone. On our last call, we laid out our strategy for fiscal 2023. Our overarching goal was and continues to be to drive towards profitability by transforming our customer base to focus on higher value customers. That is customers who spend more with us and make purchases across multiple product categories. One measurement for success here is simple. Our new customers contributing more revenue and margin. That’s a key driver to accelerating our path to profitability and long-term to faster revenue growth. And while we are still at early in the fiscal year, I’m pleased to report that we have made significant progress executing this strategy in our first quarter. And I’m excited to share those results with you today. I’d like to begin with the high level summary results from our most recent quarter followed by highlights and more detail about each component. Total revenue came in at $131.2 million, $1.2 million above our guidance. Total gross profit for the quarter was $75.8 million resulting in a total gross margin of 58%. The gross margin of our direct-to-consumer business came in at a healthy 60% largely in line with the same quarter last year. And finally, our adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter came in at $13 million, which is $5 million better than our guidance. I’ll talk about the factors that contributed to this better than expected outcome in a moment. Overall, we are happy with our first quarter results. And while we remain cautiously optimistic for the remainder of the year, given the macro backdrop, we are raising our annual guidance to reflect our first quarter performance. Now let’s talk about the drivers of the quarter. Beginning with revenue and our direct-to-consumer business, the majority of our recent revenue growth was driven by a significant increase in average order value. This is how we planned it and the results exceeded our expectations. Our average order value for the quarter came in at $31.7, an increase of nearly $2 compared to the same quarter last year, and nearly $1 compared to the fourth quarter of fiscal 2022. This is a significant milestone as an underscores the early success of the strategy I mentioned earlier. We are transforming our customer base by converting BarkBox customers to BARK customers that is customers that sign up for multiple products and make purchases across our newer product categories. And while we are still early in the fiscal year, the strategy is working. One strong indication of that success is that we added 259,000 new subscriptions in the quarter and the average revenue of this specific cohort in their first month increased by over 10% when compared to the same cohort in the first quarter of fiscal 2022. That is an encouraging data point and it captures the essence of what we are looking to achieve this year. And as we progress through fiscal 2023 and continue to acquire higher value customers, the waiting of our newer customers will become increasingly impactful for the overall unit economics of the business. Another driver of our recent direct-to-consumer revenue growth was cross-selling, which drove $10 million of revenue, a 42% increase compared to the same quarter last year. Our results and capabilities in this area continue to expand as we work on our machine learning engine, gather more first party data on millions of dogs and build deeper relationships with our customers. This is a powerful lever to accelerate growth in our newer product categories without spending heavily a new customer acquisition in these categories. And to that point, what makes our recent average order value growth and cross-selling revenue even better is that we acquired these higher value customers at a highly efficient cost of acquisition coming in at $50.80 for the quarter. This CAC is in line with our historical results. Yet, the customers we acquired last quarter spending much more and contributing more margin compared to a year ago. Again, this is a significant improvement and something that we expect to continue to benefit from throughout fiscal 2023 and beyond. Turning to our Commerce business. Total revenue was nearly $13 million for the quarter, representing just short of 10% of total revenue. Remember our commerce business is lumpy in nature. However, we continue to expect commerce revenue to represent between 10% and 15% of total revenue for the year. In the quarter, we shifted two new partners, Walgreens and Tractor Supply Company. Today, we have commitments in over 40,000 retail doors across the U.S. These partnerships extend our customer reach and raise awareness for the BARK brand in a significant way while enabling the customer to buy in the way that suits them the best. Continuing through the income statement, total gross profit for the quarters $75.8 million, resulting in a gross margin of 58%. The gross margin of our direct-to-consumer business came in at a healthy 60%, again largely in line with the same quarter last year and stronger than the previous two quarters. If you recall, our gross margin in fiscal 2022, which 4 points lower than fiscal 2021. Bringing our gross margins back to the fiscal year 2021 levels is one key building block to profitability. And we are very pleased with our results in the first quarter of this fiscal year 2023. And as I mentioned earlier, our adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter came in at $13 million, which is $5 million better than our guidance. There were several factors that contributed to this better than expected outcome. Some of which we’ve already discussed, including growing average order value, driven by more customers, purchasing multiple products across our newer categories and healthy gross margins that are returning to fiscal year 2021 levels. Also, as we discussed on our call in May, we made several process improvements for managing inventory, which we believe will result in lower charges for shrink in fiscal year 2023. Now, let’s talk about our product expansions into food and dental. I’m happy to announce that last week we introduced a new product format for BARK Food, redesigned the packaging and launched a new website all based on the customer feedback that we’ve collected over the past 18 months. You can see the new website at food.bark.co. With this launch, we’ve introduced breed based marketing include initially targeted Pitbull, Lab and Chihuahua customers. The engagement, conversion, and feedback we have received since introducing this strategy has been very encouraging. We plan to learn more about the breed based approach by serving these three breeds, expanding our food assortment and then expanding to serve more breeds as the year goes on. We’re approaching food with the same playbook that made Barkbox and Super Chewer so successful by serving each customer as an individual. For example, we have a lot of valuable first party data on Labs. We know they tend to eat too quickly and that they face hip and joint problems. With this in mind, customers can add a slow-feeder bowl and they can add joint support supplements with their purchase. We are also leveraging our happy team, which I believe is the best customer support team in the pet industry in unique ways to help sell and improve the customer experience that new food customers have with us. Food customers are now being served by a happy team member with the same breed of dog as theirs. So for example, when a customer signs up for food for Labs, a Lab parent from our happy team will be assigned to support that customer. This creates an immediate connection with the customer improves customer satisfaction scores and is expected to improve customer retention long-term. This is serving each customer as an individual in a way no other company can do. We’ve also modified the product format and delivery options. For example, removing the 4 pound and 15 pound bags and no longer selling daily portion meals. This new format improves margins and is preferred by our customers. The new format can be purchased on a discounted subscription basis or individually at full price. Customers can also purchase add-on products such as slow-feeder bowls for Labs who eat too fast, toppers food dogs who like extra flavor and supplements tailored to each breed’s unique needs. These add-on products improve the margin of each shipment and serve the individual dog even better. We have also introduced inflation proof pricing to our food customers. If you subscribe to BARK Food, we will guarantee the price of your dog’s food for life. Customers are feeling the pain of inflation and it’s gotten worse in pet food over the past year. We aim to give customers assurance and peace of mind that when they commit to BARK, we commit right back to them with locked in pricing that recognizes their loyalty. We believe this incentive will not only raise awareness, but also create food customers for life. This makes sense for us as a direct-to-consumer business with strong margins, a large customer base and robust cross-selling opportunities that allow us to offer more value to our customers as compared to traditional retail based food companies. We also believe will benefit with stronger retention and lower customer acquisition costs due to this offer. And we believe it’s a relief to customers who are struggling with inflation today. Collectively, these changes are improving conversion, accelerating revenue growth and improving customer satisfaction scores, which we believe will improve retention, accelerate AOV, and most importantly, create BARK customers for life. As we briefly discussed on our last call, our food business was following a similar trajectory to our BARK Bright, which launched roughly one-year before our food business. In fiscal year 2022, orders for Bright increase 121% to 236,000, representing $6 million of revenue. Last quarter, direct-to-consumer revenue from Bright increased 169% to $2.4 million with a 55.4% gross margin for the quarter. We are thrilled with these results. The dental category represents a $10 billion market opportunity. And even with this fast rate of growth, we have a huge opportunity for year – for growth for years to come. Finally, let’s discuss profitability. Stepping back into the CEO role, we’ve been making material improvements across our business. We are focused on raising the average order value of every customer, tightening up our margins and overall unit economics, managing to a consistent cost of customer acquisition and streamlining our team activities to limit spending. As I said previously, if we return to the margin profile we have in fiscal year 2021, we will make big leaps towards profitability. This takes time that the entire business is becoming more efficient and we are on a good path to profitability. And while we’re just one quarter into the fiscal year, we are very pleased with our progress. We are adding customers efficiently, AOV is growing and margins are improving. This all led to an adjusted EBITDA loss of $13 million, which is $5 million ahead of our guidance for the quarter. As I said, we are cautiously optimistic about the remainder of the year factoring in macro uncertainty into our guidance. With that said, we are raising our guidance and now expect an adjusted EBITDA loss for the full year of $33 million as compared to our previous guidance of $36 million. For the fiscal second quarter, we expect total revenue of $135 million and adjusted to EBITDA loss of $8 million, a meaningful improvement compared to our fiscal first quarter. The last item I’d like to highlight is inventory. Total inventory increased 3% to $158 million compared to the fiscal fourth quarter of 2022. We continue to hedge against potential supply chain disruptions. However, we do not believe that inventory will be a material drag on working capital this year and we expect our inventory to come down from current levels as we leverage the products we have on hand over the next several quarters. It takes time for us to turn this as we are typically ordering product six months in advance. So we’ll take a couple quarters to see our progress reflected on our balance sheet. But one great thing about our subscription model is that the customer is unaware of the products they will receive in their dogs in trend.In a traditional retailer e-commerce business, the customer selects the exact products they want send to them. In our model, it’s a surprise each month and we can leverage the inventory we have on hand at our discretion. Overall, we were very pleased with our execution last quarter and believe that the business will be much more efficient this year and will continue to improve beyond fiscal 2023. We ended the quarter with $177 million of cash on hand, which we believe is more than enough to get us to profitability. To quickly summarize, we hit the ground running in fiscal 2023 and made solid progress across all of our key priorities. We are acquiring higher value subscribers, growing AOV at a healthy rate and more successfully introducing new customers to our offerings in food and dental. At the same time, we’ve made improvements throughout our margin and cost structure, which have already begun to accelerate our path toward profitability. We outperformed our guidance on the top and bottom line. And as a result, we’re were cautiously optimistic for the next quarter and the remainder of the year. Therefore, look for us to deliver $135 million in revenue in the second quarter with an $8 million adjusted EBITDA loss and a full year adjusted to EBITDA loss of $33 million now, we look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Howard.