Thanks, Mika, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us as we share insights into our third quarter results and the continued progress we're making on our strategy. In the third quarter, we continued to improve our operational, financial and guest metrics. And then in the last month of the quarter we turned on our first national advertising campaign in over three years that both significantly narrowed our traffic gap versus the industry, as well as accelerated market share growth versus the industry. Operationally, we continue to make improvements through ongoing simplification, as well as reinvesting into our labor model. And the key guest metrics we look at to understand whether these changes are working, intent to return, food grade, server attentiveness and guests experiencing a problem, have all made significant improvements. This is good progress toward our longer-term vision of improved sustainable performance through a better guest experience. We've also made some improvements in driving traffic. The past six months of promotional and merchandising strategy shifts, have funded the start of return to national advertising. As a result, we're seeing incremental improvements in traffic trends versus the industry, as well as margin improvement from the reduction of discounting and promotionally comping food. And while we all know, we have lots more work ahead of us, the progress we are seeing so far is very encouraging that we're on the right track. In addition to the progress in these key financial metrics, we are also encouraged by the positive momentum we are seeing with our restaurant teams. We're wrapping up a season of town halls with Chili operators all over the country, and I thought it'd be helpful to share with you what we did and what we're hearing from the teams in the field. At these meetings, our executive leadership team and company officers spend time introducing managers to our Chili's NorthStar and hosting listening sessions with our restaurant team leaders. Our senior officers asked about how the past year of changes have improved the efficiency of our restaurant operations and what else we can do to continue to make it easier, more fun and rewarding for their teams to better serve our guests. We're hearing some very encouraging stories, our heart-of-house team members are consistently telling us, the jobs easier than it was one year ago. We're also hearing appreciation for listening to our operators ideas and quickly enacting them. They're seeing their ideas show up in restaurant, they're seeing the improvements and they are excited about being more in control of their future and more in control of their results. I've had several managers seeking out at these town halls to let me know they feel heard, they see the change and they now intend to stay with Chili's because they believe in the direction of the brand. This culture shift is translating into improvements in our managerial turnover levels, which are now lower than pre-pandemic, back to being better than the industry and continuing to trend in the right direction. Hourly team member turnover is also trending in the right direction, now too. The progress we're seeing today lets us know that our strategy is working. We believe that the hard work and investments we're making to improve the team member and the guest experience will ultimately deliver higher traffic and guest frequency overtime. As I mentioned last quarter, we're also working to optimize our labor model to further improve the guest and team member experience. In December, we layered in some investments that have been well received by both team members and guests, like additional cook hours and a quality assurance role to make sure that the food is hot, fresh and the orders are right. While we still have work to do, especially in the front of the house, these changes have delivered significant improvements in guest and team member scores. In addition to the progress on guest experience, I know everyone is eager to hear about the results of our first TV advertising since the pandemic started more than three years ago. We launched a new campaign at the end of February and continued that campaign through all of March. The strategy for advertising was simple, with more and more guests looking for great value, given the macro environment, we believe we could drive traffic through hard hitting food spots that showcased our leadership value. We heroed our Chili's Three for Me Oldtimer with Cheese $10.99 meal, which includes nearly a [half-town] (ph) premium cheeseburger with all the fixings, endless chips and salsa and a bottomless soft drink. We believe that offers superior value, not just in full service restaurants, but also versus fast casual and fast food. The abundance and quality of that meal is unbeatable, but it had been a while since we told customers about it. During the campaign we aired ads with high-impact spots for high visibility, Prime Time TV, March Madness and the major streaming sites like Hulu and Paramount Plus, basically if you watched a screen, it would be hard to miss us. And the results are very encouraging, our data show the campaign drove more frequency with existing guests, as well as brought some last guests back into Chili's. This drove a significant narrowing of the traffic gap and a significant acceleration in Chile's market share growth, versus casual dining. And that market share acceleration has continued throughout April. Our team members love the ad too, and we often heard from guests that the food we are serving looks just like the commercial. We're executing better than we have in a long time, delivering abundant value with high quality, at sharp price points, that's going to win with guests every time. It's also important to note that we made significant changes to our in-restaurant merchandising strategy versus the last time we ran national TV ads with the objective of minimizing trade down, and those results are encouraging as well. While we did grow the $10.99 Three For Me meal mix, we also drove trade up in $13.99 and $15.99 value bundles. Said in simpler terms, we got more traffic than we had banked on and we got less trade down than we had budgeted for, which means, more sales and more profits from being on TV versus if only used to advertise. Again very good progress. Based on those results we plan to leverage this model going forward and next fiscal year I expect more regular bursts of national advertising to accelerate traffic growth. But TV advertising isn't the only tool we have to drive traffic. We know that most -- most powerful traffic driving tools have to work together to supplement our national ad windows. For us that's an effective CRM program and digital advertising that drives frequency through targeted relevant messaging. We need more out of our CRM program to accelerate progress, so during the quarter I made structural changes to consolidate our marketing teams. Now our social media, digital and national marketing teams are all working together to drive traffic and frequency under the leadership of Chief Marketing Officer, George Felix. We'll have more to share about George and the team's initial thinking on CRM and direct marketing channels at our Investor Day, next month. Now I'd like to spend a few minutes on our food and drink pillar progress. One of the main reasons we're so committed to ongoing simplification of our operations and menu is so we can reinvest our energy and our resources in what we call Core Four. The products that differentiate Chili's in the market, Burgers, Fajitas, Chicken Crispers and Margaritas. We know that we execute these products with excellence every time, nobody can do them better than Chili's. Every quarter we plan to share the progress we're making on our Core Four segments. On margaritas during the third quarter we soft-rolled the Sangria Swirl Margarita on our bar happy hour menu and it's performed well enough to now earn a spot on the Margarita [lap] (ph) with our new menu drop at the end of this month. We also introduced a premium Hennessy Margarita that quickly became a top seller, earning the number five spot in March. And from a food standpoint, the third quarter was our first full quarter after eliminating the lower mixing original tempura batter from our Crisper menu. If you recall, we've historically had two breading recipes for our chicken tenders. The original Crisper which is a tempura batter and our Crispy Crispers which outsells since tempura batter four to one. We eliminated tempura batter in October to free of operational capacity, as we prepare for our re-launch with our updated Crisper menu in May. While there were concerns we might lose business from eliminating the tempura Crisper, I'm pleased to share the opposite has happened. Crisper mix is now 3% higher versus when we had two different types of breading, which would suggest eliminating the original Crisper has been a non-event. Simplifying down to one Crisper batter enables moving to a bulk breading procedure in preparation for the launch of our new menu later this month. And that new menu will heavily feature Crispers with additional sauces, a new Mac and Cheese and new merchandising with four, five and six count Crisper platters, which in test, drove significant dollars in profit. We're excited to have you taste this product in person for those of you that are here for Investor Day next month. Fewer SKUs, less to train and maintain, more business and we're now set up to relaunch this important menu category. Again, we're seeing continued progress. The key takeaway for all of you is that, while we continue to have lots to do, our strategy is working. I'm excited to see our metrics moving in the right direction. I'm excited there's a lot more upside to continue getting after for the long-term growth of the business. We're looking forward to hosting many of you next month at our Investor Day at our Restaurant Support Center, here in Dallas, where the leadership team will give you a deeper dive into how we're accelerating improvements to the guest experience, our plans to drive traffic and trial, and updates on how we expect that will impact the business over time. Now, I'll hand the call over to Joe, who will walk you through the numbers. Go ahead Joe.