Thank you for joining us today for DiamondRock's second quarter earnings call. Global travel demand remained strong. TSA throughput in the quarter reached 99% of 2019 levels and hotel stays in the United States this year are expected to surpass annual pandemic record of RMB 1.3 billion rooms. DiamondRock has been a leader in the recovery and later, we'll discuss why we are well positioned to hold and expand our leasing sector in years to come. Against the favorable industry backdrop, however, the slowing macroeconomic environment is weighing on the pace of recovery of business travel and the redistribution of leisure travel from the unfettered competition from cruise lines and international destination is impacting domestic, leisure-oriented properties. In our view, some of these adjustments are just momentary events, but they were a headwind in the second quarter and will remain a headwind until later this year. However, we are seeing an emerging new baseline of travel demand that is more weighted towards leisure travel than in the past, and industry growth will build upon this foundation going forward after firming up its new normal in 2023. DiamondRock's competitive advantage remains the high-quality portfolio of hotels and resorts that we have curated to deeply resonate with the desires of today's travelers. Measured by full year revenue, our portfolio is approximately 60% urban and 40% resort. The 20 urban hotels were tailored to be the hotel of choice for the business group and leisure travelers in their respective cities. The 16 irreplaceable experiential resorts are each in special destinations, and in many of these markets, DiamondRock has been the first mover among the hotel REITs. Perhaps our portfolio's most distinguishing feature is that almost 95% of our hotels are unencumbered by long-term management contracts, which gives us greater control over the operations at the properties and a premium valuation up on sale. All of these portfolio advantages enable DiamondRock to deliver modestly positive revenue growth to achieve all-time record revenues in the second quarter. Our hotels outperformed their competitive sets with RevPAR penetration, 112%, which represents a gain of 290 basis points from 2019. Overall, total revenues in the second quarter were $289 million or nearly 1% ahead of 2022. Hotel adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter was $93.6 million, which was $3.2 million ahead of 2019. Results were held back by the onetime impact of disruption stemming from upgrades at the Salt Lake City Marriott and the former Hilton Boston, combined with a small electrical fire that closed the Hilton Garden in Times Square for 1 week during the quarter. Okay. Let's look a little closer at the trends we saw. At urban hotels, year-over-year, RevPAR was strong, up 7.9% and the second quarter marked the first time this cycle that quarterly RevPAR for our urban hotels exceeded 2019. The group segment at the urban hotels performed well, powering solid results at our two largest urban hotels, the Chicago Marriott, which increased year-over-year RevPAR 22.8%, and Truest the Boston Westin, which increased year-over-year RevPAR by 11.7%. In total, portfolio group room nights increased 4.6% as compared to the second quarter of 2022. We are benefiting from having well-maintained hotels and a favorable geographic footprint. But importantly, there is even more opportunity after this year. Second quarter group room nights were still 11.1% behind 2019, and we project that there remains 67,000 group room nights of opportunity after 2023 to just hit prior peak. We want to emphasize that we are very encouraged by the 2024 group bookings for our hotels. 2024 group revenues on the books is up almost 28%, led by strong convincing calendars in many of our most important urban markets. Business transient was more mixed in the second quarter, but demand varies significantly by market. There was good BT strength in cities like New York, but continued weak demand in places like San Francisco. Midweek business transient occupancy at our urban properties increased 170 basis points in the second quarter versus the comparable period last year. Our trio of select service hotels in Manhattan were stars in the second quarter, as strong business transient demand pushed RevPAR above 2022 and 8.4% over 2019, even with the impact of the 1-week closure at our Hilton Garden Inn. However, we want to point out that BT comparisons became more difficult for the industry in the second quarter. So the rate of improvement appears to be moderating a bit for BT. Longer term, we believe an expanding economy will allow business transient demand to eventually recover to the 2019 peak, but it will require a few more years to get there on a nominal basis. For our resort portfolio, second quarter RevPAR was up nearly 32% over 2019, but down 13% compared to last year. While leisure travel for Americans is likely to hit a record this year, unfettered access to international destinations and cruise lines in a post-pandemic world is redistributing some of that demand. As evidence of that trend, the number of Americans traveling outbound from the U.S. to international destinations is projected to be up nearly 20% over last summer, and cruise lines are seeing big year-over-year bookings. We began experiencing the impact of this redistribution late last year, and we expect leisure patterns to approach their new normal comparisons later this year. We are already seeing signs this summer of stabilization at our resorts in Sonoma, Sausalito, and Vail. In fact, the booked RevPAR of Vail Resort for this coming December is up 24% versus the same time last year. And while the impact from this year's redistribution of leisure is leading to some near-term pullback, destination resorts remain a clear winner since the start of the pandemic, and we remain confident that resorts will enjoy the strongest new normal secular travel patterns and lodging due to a number of powerful factors. Let me touch on a few of those. One, hybrid work is a game changer. There have been 2.7 billion days of locational flexibility created post-pandemic. That's more than 2x the number of annual hotel states in the entire U.S., and this locational flexibility will disproportionately benefit leisure properties. Two, people continue to value experiences more than things, partially powered by the phenomenon of social media sharing. Three, demographic changes are powering leisure with the wave of increasing travel by millennials and baby boomers. By the end of the next decade, there will be nearly 40 million more people either in active retirement or starting a family than there was a decade ago. The wanderlust of boomers is often underestimated. And four, one of the most powerful reasons behind our conviction in the bright future for resorts is that there is a fundamental supply imbalance with a limited number of resorts in the U.S. and this imbalance will persist because of the often-insurmountable barriers to build new product in most resort markets. DiamondRock was early to recognize and exploit the long-term outperformance trend in resorts by its early allocation to the segment. In just the second quarter alone, our resorts had RevPAR increased 32% over 2019 and hotel adjusted EBITDA up 47%. That's a lot of NAV growth. Turning to internal growth. We believe that DiamondRock has a competitive advantage from the large number of impactful ROI opportunities within the portfolio. These projects will continue to drive cash flow and increase NAV. In the last 24 months alone, we have completed the conversion and up-branding of the Hythe Vail to a Luxury collection, the Hotel Clio Denver to a Luxury collection, the Sheraton Key West to a Margaritaville, and the Lodge at Sonoma to an Autograph collection. Those four hotels alone generated a collective RevPAR increase of 33.1% over 2019 in the second quarter with hotel adjusted EBITDA up 65.3%, and this is just a start. For example, just a few days ago, we announced the successful conversion of The Dagny in Boston, which marks our 14th independent hotel. The Dagny is projected to grow EBITDA by $3 million next year and ultimately double this year's EBITDA with stabilized EBITDA approaching $17 million. Additionally, we are actively underway with more ROI repositionings such as the Hilton Burlington to a Lifestyle resort to be named the Hotel Champlain, a Curio Collection hotel to be completed early next year, and the Bourbon Orleans repositioning to a premium urban lifestyle resort in the French Quarter of New Orleans to be completed well before the Super Bowl and Margarita in early 2025. Behind these, DiamondRock has a large pipeline of opportunities. There is a repositioning of The Orchards Inn Sedona. There is the potential expansion opportunity to Lake Austin Spa Resort, and there is the ability to add almost 20% more keys at The Landing Resort in Lake Tahoe. These are just a few examples of the many projects to come so stay tuned. In total, since 2021, we have completed or will soon complete $58 million of ROI repositionings at 16 of our 36 properties. The benefit of these projects often play out for several years, so we expect to continue to reap market share gains and increased profits from these efforts for some time to come. That's a good transition to give you an update on the acquisition market. We have been working diligently to find more of the transactions that have worked so well for us. Owner-operated experiential hotels in unique destinations. We have been focusing on these destination markets for the better part of a decade and have a first-mover advantage. We also have a deep well of understanding about unlocking value at these types of properties, which puts us in a great position to create value when we can pride these types of properties loose. As we said last call, any deal we would do this year would have to be something we really love. While without one small deal that fits the bill, the Chico Hot Springs Resort in Paradise Valley, Montana. This independent resort has been owner operated for a century. This is a resort with a deep history, a fiercely loyal following ,and is a treasured part of the local Montana community, which we are very respectful of preserving. We are buying the resort at an 8.1% NOI cap rate, and we projected to stabilize at north of a 10% NOI yield as it benefits from our best practices and a modern revenue management system. The prior owner operator typically set rates just once per season, did not adjust rates based on demand, and regularly accept the reservations 2 to 3 years in advance at current rates. Most of the reservations will still or still made over the phone because there is no GDS system or modern booking tools in place. Encouragingly, year-to-date through the end of the second quarter, RevPAR has increased 8.7%. In addition to the benefits related to booking practices, there are also a number of opportunities to add value with various enhancement projects on the 153-acre hotel site. Chico is a special place and a special opportunity and is representative of the type of investments we seek out. With that, let me turn it over to Jeff.