Thanks, Greg. At year-end, our total investments were approximately $6.7 billion with 363 properties in service and 98% leased. During the quarter, our investment spending was $66.5 million. 100% of the spending was in our experiential portfolio and included the acquisition of an experiential property and continued funding for experiential development and redevelopment projects commenced in 2022. Our experiential portfolio comprises 289 properties with 49 operators and accounts for 92% of our total investments or approximately $6.2 billion, and, at the end of the quarter, was 98% occupied. Our education portfolio comprises 74 properties with 8 operators and, at the end of the quarter, was 100% occupied. Our value-oriented drive-to-destinations provide a compelling value proposition for families and we are confident they will continue to prove resilient. Turning to coverage. The most recent data provided is based on a December trailing 12 month period. Overall portfolio coverage for the trailing 12 months continues to be strong at 2 times. Trailing 12 month coverage for theatres is 1.3 times, with box office for calendar year 2022 at $7.4 billion. Trailing 12 month coverage for the non-theatre portion of our portfolio is 2.7 times. Now I'll update you on the operating status of our tenants. The first quarter was a continuation of box office recovery and acceleration. Q1 total box office was $1.7 billion, a 28% increase over Q1 2022, led by: Avatar: The Way of Water; Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania; Creed III; and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish. The quarter also had the breakout titles John Wick: Chapter 4 and Cocaine Bear. We were pleased with the performance of the children's offering Puss in Boots and the adult-oriented Tom Hanks film, A Man Called Otto. 11 films grossed over $50 million in the quarter. Led by the outstanding performance of The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Q2 is off to a robust start. At $146.4 million, Super Mario Bros. generated the second highest grossing opening weekend ever for an animated feature film, which in turn fueled the biggest five-day opening ever for any film at $204.6 million. Its outsized performance continues as the highest grossing 2023 title at $440 million to-date and Universal's third-highest grossing domestic film ever. Through the past weekend, Southern titles have grossed over $100 million in 2023. Year-to-date box office gross stands at $2.49 billion and trailing 12-months box office gross is approaching $8 billion. Our high-quality theatre portfolio continues to outperform the industry. The biggest news in 2023 is the widely reported commitment from both Apple and Amazon to spend $1 billion to create content for theatrical release, reinforcing our long-held conviction that theatrical exhibition provides the best platform for studios to drive revenue, create buzz around a title and secure A-List talent. MGM's Creed III was the highest grossing film ever from Amazon at $156 million to date. Air, the first ever theatrical release from Amazon Studios starring Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, was released over Easter weekend and has grossed over $42 million to date. Air opened on more than 3,500 screens, making it the widest theatrical debut ever for a streaming service. Amazon reportedly spent over $40 million to market the film. Apple announced that Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon with Leonardo DiCaprio and Ridley Scott's Napoleon with Joaquin Phoenix will each have theatrical releases before moving to Apple TV+. With these significant commitments from two of the largest streaming services, we continue to remain confident that the supply of films for theatrical release will continue to grow, driving the ongoing North American box office recovery. Turning now to an update on our other major customer groups. We continue to see good results and ongoing consumer demand across all segments of our drive-to, value-oriented destinations. Our Eat & Play assets continued their strong post-pandemic performance with portfolio revenue up for Q1 11% and EBITDARM up 4% over Q1 2022. Most of our attractions are closed or on reduced hours in the winter months. City Museum in St. Louis and both Titanic museums had continued growth in attendance, revenue and EBITDARM in Q1 over the same period in 2022. We are commencing construction in Q2 for both the expansion of the Springs Resort and Pagosa Springs and the redevelopment of our Murrieta, California conference center into a new natural hot springs resort. Performance across our Ski portfolio was good. Despite late season weather impact, December '22 through March 2023 ski season visits were up 11% and revenue was up 8% over the same period in 2021, 2022. Good early season snowfall helped Northstar, but the unseasonably heavy late winter snowfall resulted in closures to much of Lake Tahoe and our Eastern Resorts had unseasonably warm weather at the end of the quarter. EBITDARM was negatively impacted by expense increases, including wages. Room renovations continue at our Four Season Alyeska resort in Alaska. Alyeska will join the Ikon Pass program for the 2023-2024 season and, to enhance summer offerings, just opened the Veilbreaker Skybridges, two 300-foot suspended bridges spanning two peaks at the resort. Our Margaritaville Hotel Nashville, proximate to all of Nashville's famous downtown destinations, continues its upward trajectory with increases in all metrics. With renovations complete at both a Beachcomber and Bellwether resorts in St. Petersburg, we saw occupancy, RevPAR and EBITDARM growth in the quarter. Our education portfolio continues to perform well, with year-over-year increases across the portfolio through Q4 2022 of 11% in revenue, 7% in EBITDARM and 18% in enrollment. We noted on our last quarter call that KinderCare acquired Creme de la Creme and we anticipated KinderCare would execute a pre-existing lease termination right for five early education properties. KinderCare has notified us of their intent to terminate those leases at the end of the school year in late June. We have begun marketing all five properties for sale and plan to redeploy the proceeds in experiential assets. Turning to a quick update on capital recycling. During the quarter, we sold a vacant former main event for net proceeds of $4 million. We continue discussions with multiple parties on our two remaining vacant theatres. In Q1, our investment spending was $66.5 million. In addition to the continued funding of experiential development and redevelopment projects commenced in 2022, we acquired a newly constructed Vital Climbing Gym in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on a triple net lease for $46.7 million. Vital Climbing is our second investment in the climbing gym space. Both are in very strong markets with well positioned real estate. We're maintaining our investment spending guidance for funds to be deployed in 2023 in a range of $200 million to $300 million. As of the end of Q1, we have committed an additional approximately $245 million in experiential development and redevelopment projects, which we expect to fund over the next two years without the need to raise additional capital. We anticipate approximately $132 million of that $245 million will be deployed over the remainder of 2023, and that is the amount included at the midpoint of our 2023 guidance range. In 2023, cap rates continue to be in the 8% range. In most of our experiential categories, we are seeing high-quality opportunities for both acquisition and build-to-suit redevelopment and expansion. We continue to have a good pipeline with new and existing customers and concepts. Likewise, we continue to exercise discipline, reducing our near-term investment spending and funding the investments primarily from cash on hand, cash from operations and with our borrowing availability under our unsecured revolving credit facility. As we have said for the last several quarters, we are limited by the recovery of our cost of capital, not by opportunity. I now turn it over to Mark for a discussion of the financials.