Thanks, Chris. And I certainly appreciate everyone joining us this Friday morning for our call. I understand our time slot does conflict with one of our other peer lodging REITs. So for anyone who ends up listening to our replay, if you have any questions or follow up items, of course, feel free to call me Dennis or Jeremy. Before I get into our strong quarterly results, I want to provide an update on some key corporate initiatives that we have been undertaking. First, we've been quite active, solidifying our balance sheet over the [Technical Difficulty] of maturing debt, and just the past three months we've repaid approximately $280 million of maturing debt. And as we sit here today, we've only got $30 million of maturing debt over the next year. We have no liquidity issues whatsoever, to be clear. We patiently addressed this large wall of maturities through the issuance of debt, asset sales and free cash flow. Additionally, through the refinancing, we've added exposure to floating rate debt and with rates expected to decline, we will be able to grow FFO. In fact, based on current borrowings outstanding, our FFO increases $2.6 million or $0.05 per share for every 100 hundred basis points decline in SOFR. With interest rates expected to decline as growth opportunities arise, we'll then be able to lock in longer term borrowings at more historically attractive rates. Second, as we disclosed last quarter, we're opportunistically marketing a handful of hotels for sale. We still expect to realize somewhere between $40 million and $80 million of proceeds from the sale of a portion of them or all of them. Not sure if any of the deals will close in the third quarter, but we are pleased with the progress made to date. We're also excited to announce earlier this quarter that for the first time in two years, we acquired a hotel, the brand new 148 room Home2 suites by Hilton Phoenix downtown for $43.3 million or approximately 293,000 per room. We are really excited about the hotel. It sits in the heart of downtown Phoenix, strategically located across the street from the footprint center, which of course is home to the NBA Phoenix Suns and the WNBA Phoenix Mercury. A block away from Chase Field, which is home to the Arizona Diamondbacks and mere blocks from the Phoenix Convention Center. Those three venues alone bring 5 million annual attendees to downtown Phoenix. Additionally, downtown Phoenix is a vibrant growing 1.7 square miles that drives incredibly diverse demand for hotels into its urban core. In addition to the footprint center in Chase Field and the convention center, downtown includes 11.5 million square feet of office space and a 28 acre Bioscience Core, which is currently comprised of 1.6 million square feet of space occupied with plans because it is growing rapidly to essentially double that space in coming years. Also, there's numerous museums, theaters, and many wedding venues and other event facilities that immediately surround this hotel. We're in a great location. Switching gears back to our second quarter operating results. It was a successful quarter by almost every metric for us with RevPAR, other operating profit and operating margins coming in at the top of our guidance range. RevPAR growth was a strong 4% in the quarter and that's despite a sluggish June due to the timing of the Juneteenth holiday. Our second quarter RevPAR of $151 exceeded 2019 second quarter RevPAR, the first time since the pandemic. And if you pull out the five tech driven hotels, RevPAR for us is up over 10% compared to 2019 levels. As we've said, business travel continues its steady growth across the country and that certainly was proven out this quarter for us. Occupancy was up every day over last year. And by that I mean average second quarter 2024 Sunday occupancy was higher than 2023. Again, each day of the week was higher. Additionally, our highest occupancy day of the week is now a midweek back to more of a normal pattern, a midweek Tuesday night. Our occupancy for the key weekday business travel days was 85% on Monday, 88% on Tuesday, 84% on Wednesday and 83% on Thursday. Sunday is now our lowest occupancy night again, but it was still running 76%. Second quarter occupancy at our tech hotels was 78%, only 300 basis points off 2019 levels, and that gap compressed 100 basis points from the first quarter. Importantly, occupancy in our competitive set at these same hotels was up 8% to approximately 70% in the quarter. Underpinning stronger fundamentals occurring in those markets, which we've always said is necessary for us to drive ADR growth in our hotels. Our second quarter RevPAR gains were broad based across most of our largest markets, another encouraging sign with our tech focused hotels in Silicon Valley and Bellevue leading the charge with a RevPAR gain of 10% in the quarter. Tech companies are doing some intern programs this year. We expect to derive about $500,000 of intern related revenue this year, not at the level as pre-pandemic or 2022. But with the intern programs active the market is compressing as evidenced by the continued growth in RevPAR. Market demand is starting to feel like it did before the pandemic in the Valley. Bellevue produced the strongest growth for us with RevPAR up 14% over last year and now sits less than 6% below 2019 levels. Special corporate production there was up 27%. And all the companies that we're all familiar with, like Amazon, Microsoft, TikTok, et cetera, have been putting business in the hotels. Additionally, we've got a nice group of eBay interns at the hotel this summer. Bellevue produced RevPAR gains of 13% in the quarter, driven by top account production from the likes of Google, Broadcom and [Surefox]. Second quarter RevPAR of $183 is starting to get closer to 2019 levels, roughly 18% short of that number. RevPAR at our two Sunnyvale hotels gain 8% in a quarter. And this market too is showing good underlying fundamentals with occupancy of 77% for our two large hotels there with the competitive set occupancy at 67%. So still room for growth in the set in Silicon Valley and certainly room for growth, I mean, in Sunnyvale for those two big hotels. And the normal accounts in the area are producing good midweek corporate demand. Sunnyvale RevPAR of $144, it's still, however, 28% below 2019 levels. So that is the market that suffered the most from the pandemic and has the delayed return to office policies, et cetera. Certainly, it has cut the RevPAR, but shows the kind of growth that we're having and good prospects going forward in Sunnyvale for us. San Mateo, RevPAR growth was 4% in the quarter and less than 6% shy of 2019 levels. So gaining back pretty strong there as well. Operationally, GOP margins of 46% finished at the top of our guidance range. And I will add, we absorbed approximately $700,000 of onetime non-recurring expenses that brought down our margins by 85 basis points. So just to finish up here before I turn it over to Dennis. In conclusion, we're essentially in great financial shape, having successfully recast the balance sheet and refinanced all that debt. I think we still have the most internal growth upside of other lodging REITs, considering the tech hotels and the double digit RevPAR gains we're experiencing there. Together with very little new supply coming in our markets, we're positioned to benefit from declining interest rates, because now we've reset the debt, as I said, with floating rate debt for the most part and do have the capacity and flexibility to acquire hotels if they can be accretive to our FFO and cash flow. So with that, I'd like to turn it over to Dennis.