Thanks, Greg. At the end of the quarter, our total investments were approximately $6.9 billion, with 358 properties that are 99% leased, excluding properties we intend to sell. During the quarter, our investment spending was $85.7 million, 100% of the spending was in our experiential portfolio. Our Experiential portfolio comprises 288 properties with 51 operators and accounts for 93% of our total investments or approximately $6.4 billion. And at the end of the quarter, excluding the properties we intend to sell, was 99% leased. Our Education portfolio comprises 70 properties with 8 operators. And at the end of the quarter, excluding the properties we intend to sell was 100% leased. 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 2.2x. Trailing 12-month coverage for theaters is 1.7x, with box office at $8.9 billion for the same period. Our theater coverage reporting assumes that the Regal deal was in place for the entire trailing 12-month period. Trailing 12-month coverage for the non-theater portion of our portfolio is 2.6x. Now I'll update you on the operating status of our tenants. Our theater coverage is at 2019 levels even though North American box office remains well below 2019 levels. We continue to see sustained increases in food and beverage spending and spending on premium large-format screens. Our portfolio is well positioned to benefit from these trends. And importantly, the box office generated from our high-quality theater portfolio continues to outperform the industry. Turning to Box Office and the state of the industry. Q1 North American Box Office was $1.6 billion, while Q1 performance was down 6.6% from Q1 2023 as a result of strong performances by Dune: Part Two; Kung Fu Panda 4; Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire; and Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, March's $739 million growth exceeded March 2023 by 17.4%. To date, 10 films have grossed more than $60 million in 2024. These results once again demonstrate consumers want to see good films on the big screen. Box office gross is directly tied to the number of titles released and we remain optimistic that as the year progresses, more titles than anticipated will be released as studios ramp up production coming out of the delays caused by the writers and actors strikes. April was down somewhat because of a lack of titles, but we expect to return to stronger cadence in May, continuing throughout the remainder of the year with titles including IF, Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine. With this, we reaffirm our previous estimate of between $8 billion and $8.4 billion for calendar year 2024. While it's too early to provide estimates for 2025, we are confident it will be a significant improvement over both 2023 and 2024. 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. As has been the case for several quarters, increases in fixed costs, including labor, insurance and taxes continue to pressure EBITDARM for many of our operators. Likewise, in some locations, we continue to see some pullback in attendance from post-COVID highs. Nonetheless, our non-theater coverage remains healthy at 2.6x, the same as we reported on our Q3 and Q4 calls. Our Eat & Play assets continued good performance with portfolio EBITDARM up 6% in Q1 2024 over Q1 2023. After completing 4 refreshes in 2023 that they funded, Topgolf will fund refreshes at 3 more of our units in 2024. A number of our attractions were closed seasonally in Q1. Bavarian Inn and Frankenmuth, Michigan opened the first phase of its family entertainment center in Q4 with a ropes course and climbing wall scheduled to open in Q2. The full project, including the 100,000 square foot indoor water park will open in late 2024. The new offerings are beginning to drive revenue and EBITDARM growth. Our fitness assets continue to show membership growth. Even while under construction for an extensive expansion project scheduled to open in spring 2025, our Springs Resort in Pagosa Springs continues its ADR growth. We're confident the expansion will drive growth at this outstanding asset. Ski results for the season were solid, despite weather-based attendance challenges everywhere but Alaska. In general pass sales across the portfolio offset any weather issues. Our Alyeska Resort benefited from an above-average snowfall and the introduction of the Ikon Pass. Hotel room renovations are complete at Alyeska, with restaurant and lobby renovations expected to be completed by year-end. Our significant expansion at the Jellystone Kozy Rest RV park north of Pittsburgh is 90% complete. And with the substantial improvements, we anticipate increases in revenue and EBITDARM. Both the Margaritaville Nashville Hotel and our Camp Margaritaville RV resort & Lodge in Pigeon Forge, continue to perform very well. We have seen some softness in ADR at the St. Petersburg market, which was negatively impacted our Bellwether and Beachcomber Resorts. Our Education portfolio continues to perform well with year-over-year increases across the portfolio through Q4 of 6% in revenue and 13% in EBITDARM. As we indicated last year, our KinderCare portfolio was subject to a rent reset retroactive to January 1, but calculated in the first quarter. We have reached an overall agreement with KinderCare to reset the rent. As we anticipated, our overall rent increased by approximately $1 million, and we will receive one location back at the end of the quarter, which we are actively marketing. We have sold 4 of the 5 KinderCare locations we took back last year. During Q1, our investment spending was $85.7 million. We closed on the $33.4 million acquisition of Enchanted Forest Water Safari in Old Forge, New York in a sale-leaseback transaction and established a relationship with an attractions operator new to EPR. Enchanted Forest Water Safari is a 4-season resort in the heart of the Adirondack's, with the largest water park in New York, amusement rides, a hotel, private lake, RV sites and cabins and access to hundreds of miles of snowmobile trails. We also extended our relationship with Andretti Karting, closing on 2 new build-to-suit locations. As we announced on the year-end call, we provided build-to-suit financing for our sixth Andretti Karting location, this one in the greater Kansas City area. The total commitment is $35 million, with $8.8 million funded at closing. After our year-end call, we also closed on a $5.8 million loan to Andretti to acquire land in Schaumburg, Illinois for another build-to-suit Andretti Karting location. Upon finalization of a construction contract and completion of due diligence items, the mortgage will be converted to a triple net lease with funding capped at $38 billion. Cap rates for these deals exceeded 8%, creating compelling long-term value. We're maintaining investment spending guidance for funds to be deployed in 2024 in a range of $200 million to $300 million. Through quarter end, we have committed approximately $220 million for experiential development and redevelopment projects that have been closed, but are not yet funded, to be deployed over the next 2 years. We anticipate approximately $111 million of the $220 million will be deployed in 2024, which amount is included at the midpoint of our 2024 guidance range. In most of our experiential categories, we continue to see high-quality opportunities for both acquisition and build-to-suit redevelopment and expansion. We have a robust pipeline with new and existing customers and concepts. Given our cost of capital, we will continue to maintain discipline and to fund those investments primarily from cash on hand, cash from operations, proceeds from dispositions and with our borrowing availability under our unsecured revolving credit facility. Turning to a quick update on capital recycling. As we announced on our year-end call, in Q1, we sold both of our Titanic Museums in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee and Branson, Missouri to a private equity firm at a 6% cap rate on in-place income for a combined $45 million in net proceeds and a gain on sale of approximately $17 million. The cap rate and gain demonstrate the value of our experiential investments. We also sold the third of our vacant former Regal theaters for $1.2 million and a gain of approximately $900,000. We have 8 remaining to sell with signed purchase and sale agreements for 3 of those 8. Beyond the 8 vacant former Regal theaters, we have one remaining vacant AMC theater and a vacant Xscape Theater we terminated in Q4. We are maintaining our 2024 disposition guidance in the range of $50 million to $75 million. I now turn it over to Mark for a discussion of the financials.