Thanks, Chad. Good morning, everyone. Over the last few quarterly earnings calls, we've talked about our outlook for the year in terms of two storylines that we expected to play out over the short term. First, we expected two different trends in our divisions with hotels continuing to grow with steady occupancy growth and events in our markets that we would benefit from. While we expect the theaters to be impacted by product supply challenges following last year's Hollywood strikes. Second, in theaters, we expected the year to be a tale of two halves, with the most significant impact of the product supply shortages felt in the first half of the year with stronger product returning in the second half of the year, building momentum heading into 2025. This has played out as expected. But when you peel back the onion, there are surprises, both positive and negative in the quarter. While the second quarter started out very slowly in our theater division in April and May, we really started to see an inflection point in June with films that drew large audiences and even broke box office records. And hotels have got off to a strong start that carried through to deliver a great quarter, which we expect to be followed by an even better third quarter given the events we have going on in our markets. While the quarterly comparisons to last year have been tough, they were not a surprise. We see improvement coming in the second half of the year and our long-term outlook for both businesses remains positive. I'll start today with our Hotels and Resorts division. You've seen the segment numbers, and Chad shared some additional detail on the performance metrics, including our outperformance to the concepts and upper upscale hotels nationally. Overall, the quarter was solid with several highlights. First, we continue to win group business that is filling in midweek occupancy and it helped grow our overall occupancy to nearly 73%. This is our highest occupancy level in the second quarter since the pandemic. And while it isn't quite all the way back to the typical second quarter pre-pandemic average of around 77%, we continue to get closer. Our average daily rates were effectively flat in the second quarter compared to the second quarter last year, and we held ADR despite the increase in group business, which is typically at lower rates. In addition, we continue to benefit from optimizing our revenue management strategy at select properties. We've been aggressive on daily rates during low demand periods to drive occupancy and maximize revenue with our available room night capacity. The net result has been successful in growing our occupancy and overall RevPAR. Finally, we did continue to see some modest rate softening among leisure customers in the quarter at some of our properties, which was offset by rate growth in other segments. Our banquet and catering business continues to benefit the strength in our group business with food and beverage revenues growing 3.8% in the second quarter of 2024 compared to the second quarter last year. As we look ahead, group bookings remained strong with our group room revenue bookings for the remainder of fiscal 2024, our group pace in the year for the year, running approximately 11% ahead of where we were at this time last year, excluding the impact of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. Looking further ahead, our group pace for fiscal 2025 is running over 36% ahead of where we were at this time last year. Banquet and catering pace for the remainder of fiscal 2024 and 2025 is similarly ahead of where we were at this time last year. Our newly renovated meeting space is in ballrooms at Grand Geneva Resort & Spa and at The Pfister have contributed to our success in winning groups and event bookings. The guest room renovation of the historic building at The Pfister Hotel was completed on schedule with all rooms back in service and time for the RNC. We plan to complete the last phase of the hotel renovation with a refresh of the lobby and public space later this year. The investments we have made in our properties put us in a great position to win in our markets. As we all saw a few weeks ago, Milwaukee recently hosted the Republican National Convention and our 3 downtown hotels, The Pfister, Saint Kate, and Hilton Milwaukee City Center, all played a big role in welcoming an estimated 50,000 visitors to the city. During the five nights of the event, we hosted convention attendees and many VIPs in the complete sellout of our over 1,250 rooms at these 3 hotels with 19 convention events in our ballrooms and meeting spaces. In terms of financial impact to our third quarter, the RNC generated over 3 million in incremental revenue for the division over our volumes during the same week last year. This was a milestone event for the city with national media coverage that highlighted our great hospitality and all the things that make this city great. While the event certainly will be a net positive to our third quarter results, more importantly, we believe the event showcased the city's ability to successfully host large-scale conventions and events, with venues including Baird Center, the expanded convention center that opened earlier this summer and Fiserv Forum. We are optimistic the success of the RNC will have a long-term positive impact on event bookings and hospitality demand in the market in future years. Turning to theatres. As I mentioned in my opening comments, we saw a significant difference in the performance of the division in April and May compared to June, both in terms of the overall box office in each month and in terms of our performance relative to the nation. The National Box Office had its biggest monthly decline of the year in April of approximately 38% and then sequentially improved each month as we had more and better films to play. And Marcus Theaters box office comparisons, followed that national trend. Chad went through our results for the quarter, including our circuit underperformance, underperforming the change in the National Box Office by 2 percentage points in the second quarter compared to last year. However, as Chad mentioned, while we started the quarter slowly, we finished strong. Looking by month, we underperformed in April and May and then significantly outperformed the nation in June by over 9 points for the month. There are several changes that occurred that we believe drove this positive trend that has now continued into July. First, I'll start with the changes that we made on our last call. I noted with the softer film slate, we were refocusing on driving attendance to keep customers coming to the movies and making sure we had a compelling offering for everyone, particularly our value-oriented customers. In May, we rolled out our everyday matinee promotion, which offers a $7 ticket for kids and seniors for any shows starting before 4:00 PM on a standard screen seven days a week. In addition, we continue to evolve our value Tuesday promotion, and we didn't make any further changes to emission prices on Tuesday. In May, we reintroduced a free complementary size popcorn for all MMR members replacing the prior Tuesday promotion of a 20% discount on all food and non-alcoholic drink for MMR members. These changes are designed to drive attendance and appeal to value-oriented customers on making sure that movie going remains the most affordable out-of-home entertainment option. Based on the first two months of results, the changes appear to be contributing to our improved performance. Second, the mix of films shifted to genres that played well in our markets in May and June, including Inside Out 2, IF, and Bad Boys: Ride or Die, all of which outperformed our normal market share. We expected that the increase in promotions would create a headwind to our admission per caps, which were down 3.1% in the second quarter and were also impacted by a challenging comparison with high 3D ticket sales for the Super Mario Bros movie last year. In terms of the quantity of wide release films in the second quarter, we had a similar number of titles with 28 wide releases in the second quarter of fiscal 2024 compared to 29 in the second quarter last year. However, similar to what we saw in the first quarter, the second quarter slate this year was weaker overall, with lesser performances and fewer blockbusters with an average opening weekend U.S. box office gross per wide release film that was 28% lower than the same average in the second quarter last year. Only Inside Out two opened to over 100 million in the second quarter this year compared to three films within opening over 100 million in the fourth fill, The Little Mermaid coming very close with a $95 million opening during the second quarter last year. In June, we saw that once again, when quality product supply is there, audiences still want to come out to see films on the big street. Inside Out 2 delivered the second highest grossing opening weekend animated film of all time and has gone on to become the highest gross of animated film of all time, overtaking other Pixar blockbusters, including Incredibles 2 and Frozen II, with the domestic box office that now stands at over $600 million during its 6-week run. The momentum continued into July with the releases of Despicable Me 4, Twisters, and Deadpool & Wolverine, with last weekend's highest outrated opening of all time. Deadpool & Wolverine broke several records from Marcus leaders as well, becoming our highest ever grossing weekend summer film opening between May and August and our highest ever PLF grossing opening weekend summer film. As we look ahead to the rest of the year, we see a stronger second half. This fall, we are excited about Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Joker, Folie a Deux, and Venom: The Last Dance, among others. For the holidays, we look forward to films such as Gladiator II, Moana 2, Wicked, the Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, Kraven the Hunter, Mufasa, and Sonic the Hedgehog 3. As we look further ahead to next year, the slate for 2025 is stacked with several very strong franchises, including Superman: Legacy, Captain America, Mission Impossible, Jurassic World, Karate Kid, The Fantastic Four, Snow White, Wicked 2, and Avatar 3, just to name a few. As we look at the product supply ramping back to and potentially exceeding 2023 levels in 2025 and further growth beyond. We remain very positive and optimistic about the long-term future for the industry and our theatre business. Finally, I'd like to briefly talk about growth in features. While over the last few years, we have closed several underperforming theatre locations as we optimize our footprint, we continue to look at opportunities to grow this business in attractive locations and with a financial model that makes sense. We recently announced the addition of a new theatre to our circuit, the shops at West End in St. Louis Park, a suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota. This is our eighth location in Minnesota and our closest in Minneapolis. So that's a great example of what we think is possible and we work closely with landlords to reposition theatre, in this case, an attractive lifestyle center in a good market that we know. We reopened a theatre as the Marcus West End Cinema in early July, bringing all of our great offerings and programs to customers on day 1, including our Magical Movie Rewards loyalty program, Marcus passport, value Tuesday and everyday matinee. We look forward to making further improvements to the theatre with the landlord in the months to come. Finally, I would like to briefly comment on the financing transactions that Chad covered earlier. As you can tell, we've been busy the last several months developing and executing the financing plan to extend and simplify our capital structure. And I would be remiss if I didn't congratulate Chad, I'm leading a complex refinancing that we believe will be a huge positive for our shareholders in the long term. We often get questions on capital allocation, our priorities and how we think about the mix of paying a dividend and share repurchases. One of the ways we've viewed repurchasing a substantial portion of our convertible debt was that we were indirectly buying back our equity by eliminating potential future dilution. We are continually evaluating where we can best deploy capital with each investment decision, whether for growth, maintaining our assets, returning capital to shareholders through dividends or through our current share repurchase authorization of 2.4 million shares. In this regard, we are optimistic and opportunistic and will deploy capital where we see the best returns. I'd like to once again express my appreciation for our dedicated associates in the Marcus Corporation. Their outstanding work and commitment to serving our customers is responsible for our success, and we appreciate all they do every day. As we say so often, they are our most important assets. So on behalf of our Board of Directors and our entire executive team, thank you to all of our associates. And with that, at this time, Chad and I would be happy to open the call up for any questions you may have.