Thank you, Amit, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate that you joined us today to discuss fubo's second quarter 2024 results. Our second quarter continued our strong start to 2024 and the momentum we have achieved since becoming a publicly traded company in 2020. The second quarter marked our sixth consecutive quarter of global year-over-year improvement in our profitability metrics, while in North America, we exceeded expectations. In North America, we closed the second quarter with double-digit year-over-year growth, posting $382.7 million in total revenue, an increase of 26% year-over-year, and 1.45 million paid subscribers, up 24% year-over-year. Our ad business also remains strong, ending the quarter with $25.8 million in revenue, an increase of 14% year-over-year. Alongside this growth, we are making great strides on our path to profitability with meaningful year-over-year improvements in net loss, adjusted EBITDA, and free cash flow, which John will discuss in more detail. This progress gives us continued confidence in our ability to execute with all teams at fubo operating at the highest levels. Note that our profitability goals exclude the potential impact of the sports streaming joint venture. In addition to our robust operational execution, we were agile and opportunistic in managing our balance sheet. In Q2, 2024, we repurchased $46.9 million of convertible debt at an average price of 56.6% of par value. To fund these repurchases, we issued stock at $1.28 under our ATM program, achieving an impressive net effective issuance price of $2.26. That's an outstanding 77% premium. This strategic move not only enhanced shareholder value by reducing outstanding debt, but also boosted our financial flexibility and mitigated dilution. These actions further underscore our confidence in our go-forward plan, as well as our commitment to driving business growth and shareholder value. fubo is focused on delivering value and expanding our relevancy to consumers in a fast-changing environment. Consumers benefit from a market with healthy competitive dynamics. We continue to fight for competition and better prices in a market in disruption, contrasting with the Walt Disney Company, Fox Corporation, and Warner Brothers discovery. Their JV attempts to circumvent the need for regulatory approval, while still giving these partners control of 80% of the premium sports market. The JV claims to solve the issue of bulky cable bundles, but we believe its primary goal is to limit competition, boosting partners' profits synthetically, and leading to steep price hikes for consumers, similar to those seen with their SVOD services. Consumers passionate about sports content, but frustrated with high prices and inflexible bundles, need multiple streaming options with competitive pricing. fubo, like all distributors, have the right to fairly compete in the sports streaming market. A fair market would force the JV partners to compete against each other in the licensing of sports channels to pay-TV platforms, virtual and traditional, as well as with other market participants further downstream in the distribution space. This will foster competition, benefiting customers with better prices and choices. Our preliminary injunction hearing to prevent the JV's launch goes before the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, starting today. We appreciate the support we have received from across the spectrum. We continue to be encouraged by earlier reports that the Department of Justice is looking into the JV. And an increasing number of high-profile Capitol Hill lawmakers, public interest groups, and other content distributors are alarmed and have weighed in on the negative impact that JV would have for consumers. We continue to strongly believe in the merits of our case and look forward to going before the judge this week. Meanwhile, we remain focused on delighting our consumers with a seamless and innovative product that aggregates a portfolio programming at compelling price points. In recent months, we've seen media companies increasingly turn their streaming services into app stores, requiring consumers to log into different apps and stream from multiple interfaces to access content. While these companies are characterizing this approach as consumer friendly, users are still feeling the same pain point, friction. Therefore, we have every indication that our super aggregation strategy is the right one. As we believe, the best consumer experience is frictionless, with multiple bundles from skinny to fat to choose from. As a super aggregator, our vision is to offer users the premium content they love all within the fubo ecosystem, differentiating our service from the so-called soft bundles on the market. In the second quarter, we launched the fubo Free tier, the first layer in our super aggregation model. fubo Free offers nearly 200 free ad-supported streaming television, or FAST channels and is currently available to certain former fubo paid and free trial subscribers. fubo Free users can reactivate their paid subscriptions at any time, which they may choose to do as their favorite sports seasons return to play. Early results are encouraging, and we may expand fubo Free to other cohorts in the future. We plan to further build out our tiered offering with stand-alone content that does not require the purchase of the main fubo product. This content can range from SVOD to pay-per-view and TVOD to skinny bundles. We look forward to sharing more in the weeks and months ahead. In closing, the second quarter continued to demonstrate how fubo has grown efficiently as we balance our profitability goals, while strategically investing in our business. We remain focused on bringing consumers an aggregated sports entertainment offering that delivers premium content and innovative product features at the price point that's right for them. And as I said last quarter, we remain committed to a competitive streaming landscape that offers consumers choice, fair pricing, and innovation. This is the vision upon which fubo was founded and is only achievable in a truly competitive market. I will now turn the call over to John Janedis, CFO, to discuss our financial results in greater detail. John?