Thanks, Briony, and thank you for joining us this morning. Let's start by reviewing capital projects, then transactions, and I'll conclude with comments on what we're seeing and how that drives how we're thinking about the rest of the year. First off, recall that we completed guest room renovations at the Westin San Diego Bayview in early 2024. RevPAR in the first quarter was up 28% against a competitive set, which declined 8%, and NOI increased 65% year-over-year. We're looking to close out this project with minor changes to the lobby configuration to improve F and B potential by expanding the seating area and potentially offering a grab-and-go option. At Bourbon Orleans, we concluded a room renovation in late 2024, which supported the implementation of a resort fee. In the first quarter, other income increased over $200,000 or 90% versus the first quarter of 2024. For the year, we are forecasting a $1 million increase in high-margin other income at the Bourbon, implying a mid-teen current yield on renovation cost. In the first quarter, we completed the room refresh at the Hilton Garden in Times Square, and the product looks great. This is the first time the rooms have been refreshed since the hotel was constructed in 2014. RevPAR was down by over 16% due to displacement, and we saw a $500,000 impact on EBITDA. In a market that runs close to 90% occupancy, the first quarter is the most cost-effective window to execute such work. And our team did a great job executing here on time and on budget. Turning to Sedona, the renovation of our rooms at the Orchards is complete, and we are beginning the process of rebranding this property as the Cliffs Sedona. In fact, aerial photos on the website thecliffssedona.com will give you a good view of our location in the heart of Sedona and highly desirable views of the red rocks visible from every room of the hotel. All that remains is for the hillside work to be completed. This will create a new pool and bar area with stunning views of the red rocks and connect the Cliffs Hotel to our L'Oubert De Sedona that sits below on a shaded creek. Construction is well underway and will be completed by fall 2025. We are very excited about the repositioning opportunity and believe it will be an earnings and value driver. On the disposition front, we previously announced the sale of the Weston City Center Hotel for $92 million during the quarter, which equated to close to a 5% trailing cash flow yield after CapEx. A portion of these proceeds was accretively recycled into repurchasing common shares at an average price of better than a trailing 10 cap rate. We continue to pursue opportunities to dispose of nonstrategic assets as well as opportunistic dispositions, all with a focus on recycling proceeds into the most attractive investment alternatives. There is nothing we can comment on at this time, but we hope to be able to share more soon. On the transaction front, there are a good number of high-dollar resorts on the market, with prices ranging from $500,000 to as much as $2 million per key. All in, pricing after CapEx is in the range of a 5.5% to about a 7% cap rate. Given our source of funds, our common shares, preferred equity, and even our debt are among the most accretive reinvestment options today, but we are always actively looking for accretive recycling opportunities. Before I get into guidance, let's talk about what we are seeing real-time. On the resort front, RevPAR growth was up about 1% in January, 4.4% in February, and flat through about the first three weeks of March. It was only in the final days of March when the resorts were comparing against Easter week 2024 that we saw RevPAR decline. Fast forward to mid-April, and we saw a significant year-over-year RevPAR spike at the same properties for Easter week 2025. Moreover, the transient pickup for the second quarter remains consistent with last year. The point is that much of the softness we have seen thus far at our resorts seems to originate from holiday shifts and not the coincidental timing with negative macroeconomic headlines. Looking ahead, an unsettled economy may lead to more demand, at the drive-to resorts common in our portfolio versus costlier fly-to destinations. Our direct exposure to foreign travelers is low. Nevertheless, foreign visitation to The US will likely be softer than initial expectations, and it is not clear whether the incremental demand from US travelers will be sufficient to backfill this potential gap. Currently, we are not seeing a meaningful shift in resort demand but remain vigilant. The long-term secular drivers for US resorts remain strong, but we recognize near-term performance could be soft. Nevertheless, we expect DiamondRock Drive two destinations will perform well in this environment. At our urban hotels, business transient demand increased in the mid-teens during the quarter, and trends are encouraging. As for group, it's important to remind everyone DiamondRock is building upon peak group room revenues in 2024. Given that backdrop, lead volume is still higher than last year. Group pickup for 2025 or in-the-year-for-the-year bookings increased in January and again in February, but we saw a pause in group pickup as we moved into March. It is that pause, that deceleration in our lead conversion, leading us to a more cautious stance on the back half of 2025. The optimistic view is that group demand is there, and a little more confidence in an unsettled economy will convert business leads to revenue. Considering we've seen capitulation on many aspects of the unpopular trade policies, one could argue we're already moving toward a calmer environment. The cautious view is confidence arrives too late, the industry to fully recapture its prior potential, typically, group-dependent hotels in the market grow anxious and start discounting, which leads to lower revenue creation than may have otherwise occurred. Our decision to reframe our 2025 guidance was driven by healthy group lead volume and business transient demand on the one hand and the acknowledgment that a continuing pause in group pick may make it more challenging for us to replicate the very strong group production we had in the back half of 2024. So let's get to our outlook for 2025. Our FFO per share guidance is unchanged, at a range of $0.94 to $1.06 per share. We revised our full-year 2025 RevPAR outlook to a range of minus 1% to plus 1% growth, or about 200 basis points lower than our prior range. Total RevPAR growth is expected to be the same, in the minus 1% to plus 1% range. The lower and upper bound of our new full-year rate assumes RevPAR for the remaining three-quarters of the year is down less than 2% at the low end and slightly positive at the high end. 2025 corporate adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $270 to $295 million, or $5 million lower at the top and bottom than our previous guidance. This places the midpoint at $282.5 million. It bears noting that the revision includes the benefit of a $3 million savings on our insurance placement. As Briony mentioned, we have a bit of financing work to do in 2025, and included in our guidance is the assumption we will execute a credit facility recast to address near-term debt maturity. Adjusted FFO is expected to be in the range of $198 to $223 million, or $1 million lower than prior guidance. Adjusted FFO per share is expected to be the range of $0.94 to $1.06, which as I said earlier, is unchanged from our prior in part because of the share repurchases as well as the flexibility our liquidity affords us to allow us to pivot our debt refinancing plans. In closing, the outlook is cloudy. Underlying trends were obscured rather than illuminated by the short-lived days of spring coinciding with holiday shifts only to be immediately followed by the somewhat ironically named Liberation Day. It is my personal view the Trump administration will continue to soften their policies to settle the economy and improve the reelection potential of congressional Republicans in 2026. For this reason, I am cautiously optimistic we'll see economic anxiety settle as we move through 2025. Regardless of the future path, increasing earnings per share remains our focus. Our greatest investment during the quarter, aside of course from the exciting work in Sedona, was the repurchase of our common shares, and we will continue to lean in on opportunities to continue to prudently grow earnings and create value while preserving flexibility. Thank you for your time this morning, and we will be happy to answer your questions.