Thanks, Mike. Good afternoon, everybody. I'm excited to share a summary of the material progress we've made in our efforts to reposition Lumen for growth. I'll start with some major structural accomplishments. First, we've made significant progress in simplifying Lumen with two divestitures. We expect to close the sale of our EMEA business to Colt tomorrow, November 1, earlier than planned. This transaction will generate approximately $1.5 billion in net after-tax proceeds, which we anticipate will be used for debt reduction. Second, two weeks ago, we announced the sale of the majority of our CDN contracts, a transaction that will enable us to continue to focus our resources on businesses where we can differentiate ourselves in the market at scale. Next, the balance sheet. We successfully reached a broad agreement with creditors that hold over $7 billion of the outstanding debt of the company and its subsidiaries. The transaction will extend a large portion of our debt maturities and remove questions regarding the company's compliance with this debt covenants. The creditor group will also provide $1.2 billion of new financing. The closing of the transaction is subject to the satisfaction of certain conditions, including completing work with our banks to extend our revolver in term loan A and getting approval from other creditors as needed. In addition to restructuring the balance sheet, we've made the difficult decision to reshape and right-size Lumen for growth. We're taking immediate actions, which will result in about 4% fewer people inside the company. This reorg, along with additional optimization initiatives, will generate annualized savings of approximately $300 million. And as you might expect, this is a difficult, but necessary decision given the revenue pressure we felt from the noise in the market regarding our creditor discussions, as well as global macroeconomic pressures. These proactive steps to address our balance sheet and lower our cost base will reduce the noise, it will improve our agility and efficiency, and it will enable us to better compete in the markets we serve. Now, I'd like to talk about some of the operational improvements we're seeing in our Business segment. As we've shared, we have a three-pronged strategy to transform this business: one, secure the base; two, drive commercial excellence; and three, innovate for growth. And we're making progress against all three. Securing the base boils down to five things: minimizing disconnects, maximizing installations, driving increased usage, renewing customer contracts, and migrating our customers to newer technologies. If we get these five things right, we reduce churn. So, let me share this quarter's sequential performance for these five metrics in our North America, large enterprise and mid-market sales channels. We saw a 4% reduction in disconnects, a 9% increase in installs, a 5% increase in usage, a 4% increase in VPN customer renewals, and a 21% increase in voice migration. With heavy use of data and analytics to understand customer behavior and an agile approach, we created a win formula to address churn and deliver improved Business revenue performance this quarter. Obviously, a lot more work to do here, but we do see a path to success. Let's look at driving commercial excellence. This is about sales execution that ultimately yields growth. Simply put, there's just two ways to grow; you either sell to net new customers or you sell more products and services to existing ones. We're making progress against both of these growth vectors. First, we added more than 2,500 new logo customers so far this year across large enterprise, mid-markets, and public sector segments despite the headwinds I described earlier. Year-over-year, we've seen 47% more Grow products sold to existing customers or 16% normalized for a large deal that I'll talk about in just a moment. Finally, we achieved 14% higher seller productivity year-over-year, a very impressive metric given how many new sellers we have. A big part of driving commercial excellence is going after net new markets. For example, we see huge potential in the digital inclusion market, which presents an opportunity for Lumen to help states bring reliable broadband connectivity to unserved and underserved markets. We won our first large multi-year deal in this space, representing over $400 million of revenue when the State of California chose Lumen as a key strategic partner. We're now bringing the same commercial framework for public-private partnerships to other states as they seek to bridge the digital divide. All right. The third prong of our business strategy, innovating for growth. This is all about bringing net new capabilities like Network-as-a-Service, or NaaS, to the market and gaining access to new profit pools. We've made great progress driving adoption of our first NaaS offering called Lumen Internet On-Demand. This new digital capability is now generally available and has lighthouse customers in 13 industries, including healthcare, technology, insurance, retail, manufacturing, and public sector to name a few. In addition to selling NaaS directly to customers, Lumen is also leveraging our partner ecosystem to drive scale. Customers can buy Lumen Internet On-Demand through 136 enabled data centers in 10 different markets across North America through our great partners, Digital Realty and Equinix. Our NaaS product roadmap is industry defining. So, we'll be adding -- soon, we'll be adding API capability to allow customers to activate NaaS in their own business applications, then we'll layer in security with DDoS, and then we'll offer dynamic bandwidth capability for ultimate usage flexibility. Now together with our Edge Fabric and ExaSwitch, Lumen NaaS is setting the table for a new market category for the modern communication infrastructure platform, one that optimizes application performance across hybrid architectures for on-prem, at the edge, and multi-cloud, and one that makes room for rapidly changing network needs as GenAI becomes mainstream. We are cloudifying telecom, it's going to be disruptive to the industry, and we are playing to win. All right. Turning to Mass Markets, we have strong growth in Quantum Fiber enablements where our construction factory is operating well. But that said, our subscriber adds this quarter were below our expectations. During the quarter, we took significant steps to improve operations as we combined CenturyLink Fiber with Quantum Fiber, merging all inventory and field tech systems into one and vastly improved order-to-install commitments. While we believe these operational activities, coupled with lower move activity, dampened subscriber adds this quarter, we do know that we need to do better selling and penetrating existing builds. Therefore, as we face a more constrained capital environment ahead, we'll prioritize sales and marketing investments over enablement growth. While we will still build at a healthy pace, we should see greater penetration rates and a higher return on capital spent in Mass Markets. All right. To wrap up, I've often spoken about rebuilding Lumen starting with our people. We've been hard at work doing that for the past 12 months, and I'm proud to share that during the third quarter, Lumen was recognized by U.S. News & World Report as one of the 2024 Best Places to Work in telecom. It's our first time being named to the list and I think it demonstrates the power of creating a culture that enables change. Transformation is a messy business. And despite extremely challenging headwinds, we've made big and important structural changes to the company, and equally important, we've made significant measurable operational improvements. There's lots more to do, but we're confident in our strategy to pivot Lumen towards stabilization and growth. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Chris.