Thanks, Anthony, and good morning, everyone. It was a strong second quarter for the time, one in which we made further progress on the path to becoming the essential subscription for every serious person seeking to understand and engage with the world. Our Q2 results demonstrate that our strategy continues to work as designed. Let me describe how. First, our world-class news destination combined with our distinctive products in games, sports, cooking and shopping advice, attracted large and passionate audiences in giant spaces. Together, these products gave many people multiple reasons to come to the Times and numerous pathways by which to do so. Second, our subscribers were deeply engaged. In Q2, we saw the share of subscribers on our sites and apps each week hit another multiyear high. That’s a clear sign that we’re delivering unique value to users and building long-term relationships with them. Third, we saw another quarter of increasing ARPU, further evidence of the distinctive nature of our journalism and that it’s increasingly valuable to people over time. That also supports our conviction that we can keep growing digital-only ARPU year-on-year as we use our multiple pricing and monetization levers. And fourth, growth in Q2 across digital advertising, affiliate and licensing demonstrated the ability of our diverse product portfolio to power multiple revenue streams beyond subscription. In sum, our high-quality increasingly diverse portfolio of products attracted tens of millions of people each week and engaged them deeply and we’re showing that we can sustainably translate that interest into more direct relationships, more subscribers, growing revenue and increasing profitability even as the market continues to experience significant audience headwinds driven by shifts in the platform landscape. Halfway through 2024, we are on track for another year of higher AOP and margin expansion as well as strong free cash flow generation. I’ll turn now to some of the details from the quarter, starting with subscribers. We added 300,000 net new digital subscribers marking further progress on the path to our next milestone of 15 million total subscribers. The key to driving subscriber growth is having products that are continuously becoming more differentiated and valuable. That starts with news where our ongoing investments in coverage mean the time is well prepared to follow the story wherever it goes. In recent months, that’s ranged from the historic events unfolding around the U.S. presidential election to the ongoing wars in Gaza and Ukraine to intensifying weather to sweeping technological change. Alongside our broad and deep coverage of heart news Times users are also benefiting from the increased client-backed health and wellness coverage, I mentioned last quarter and an enhanced culture report. An example of the latter was last month’s ranking of the best book of the 21st Century, which was read by millions and it included an array of features for people to create their own list and track what they read. We’re also driving engagement through format innovations that make our coverage more accessible and compelling that includes live three things that deliver real-time reporting and commentary during the biggest news moment and more prominent use of video to demonstrate the expertise and hard work of our reporters across beat. It also includes an expanded audio offering that makes much of our day-to-day coverage listenable and further experiments with AI-assisted translations into Spanish. Games had another strong quarter in Q2 and contributed to our business in multiple ways. It drove new stand-alone game subscribers with the valuable funnel for new bundle subscribers. It generated meaningful advertising revenue and have brought millions of prospects to the Times portfolio. Games had two notable product enhancements in the quarter. We brought our popular new word game Strands Out of Beta and into our mobile games app, where we can reach an even bigger audience. And we added Wordle archives as a subscriber only benefit and an example of the kind of feature that entices audiences to pay and stay. We also made palpable progress on the athletics journey to become a household name among sports fans in the quarter with strong coverage of the Copa America and the Euros and substantial growth in both audience and revenue. We completed the first phase of the athletics technical migration to the Times web domain in the quarter, which enables us to better connect the athletic to the rest of our products. And just a few weeks ago, we launched a new multi-format NFL franchise called Scoop City. All of that progress helps keep the athletic on track for profitability by next year and underscores the generational opportunity we see to build a top destination for sports fans globally. The quarter’s year-on-year ARPU growth I noted earlier was a function of our ongoing success at transitioning bundled subscribers to higher prices. This reflects our strategy and actions as we steadily add value to our journalism and products, people engage more and value them more. This strengthens our ability to transition subscribers to higher prices over time, and it gives us confidence that we’ll see continued year-on-year ARPU growth. Advertising revenue in the quarter was in line with guidance, reflecting growth in our sub-brands and a modest pickup in overall demand despite the continued impact of some marketers avoiding certain hard news topics. And we continue to build new ad products that can drive even more value to marketers. Last month, we launched grand match an AI-powered tool to pair advertisers with the most relevant, high-performing content and audiences for their campaigns. Revenue beyond subscriptions and advertising exceeded guidance, driven by a strong quarter for Wirecutter and licensing. Wirecutter is providing product reviews across more categories, spotlighting more deals and delivering more advice to help people get the most out of what they buy, all of which increases its value over time. Our costs in the quarter reflected ongoing discipline even as we continue to invest in the areas that differentiate our journalism and products. That discipline, combined with strong execution resulted in another quarter of AOP growth and healthy free cash flow generation. I’ll wrap by reminding you of what we’re working to do every day, make journalism and products so valuable that people will seek them out, ask for them by name and form direct relationships and daily habits. The combination of our world-class news destination plus market-leading lifestyle products means we have complementary offerings in big spaces, each with multiple growth levers fueling multiple revenue streams. Together, we believe these make the Times resilient in a changing media landscape and well positioned for continued value creation. Now, let me turn it over to Will for more detail.