Thanks, Anthony and good morning, everyone. The third quarter was another strong one for the time as we made further progress towards becoming the essential subscription for every curious person seeking to understand and engage with the world. We passed 11 million total subscribers in the quarter, more than 5 million of whom now subscribe to the bundle or multiple products. Digital subscription revenue growth accelerated to more than 14% year-on-year and that combined with growth in digital advertising and other revenue propelled healthy growth in total revenue. These results reflected our strategy playing out as designed. First, our multi-product portfolio continued to attract tens of millions of people each week to read, listen, watch, learn, and play. They were drawn by a world-class news coverage of the major stories in politics, international affairs, society, entertainment, and beyond, as well as our distinctive products in games, sports, cooking, and shopping insights. Second, these people increasingly sought out the times directly and engaged deeply. Subscriber engagement, as measured by the share of subscribers visiting the Times each week, reached its highest point since 2020 and we once again grew direct relationship, even as the market continues to experience significant audience headwinds driven by shifts in the platform landscape. Third, that strong subscriber engagement is a sign of the value we're delivering and enabled us to keep growing ARPU in line with our expectations. And finally, all of this taken together means we can sustainably invest in the areas that we believe give us enduring advantage, our expert journalism and premium digital products. Those products generate more direct relationships and growing revenue across subscriptions, as well as advertising, affiliates, and licensing. With three quarters of the year behind us we are well 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 260,000 net new digital subscribers in the quarter, putting us further along the path to our next milestone, a 15 million total subscribers. The continuing popularity of our all access bundle means bundle and multi-product subscribers were on track to account for over half of our base by the end of next year. That matters because bundle and multi-product subscribers have a higher expected lifetime value than subscribers to any individual product. At the core of our offering is our news report, where our ongoing investments ensure The Times can follow the biggest stories of the day, no matter how difficult or complex. That commitment is evident in our election coverage, which includes comprehensive coverage of the candidates, voters, issues, stake, and the state of the race. Here our strategy is having a diversified portfolio that meets different needs and moments in user's lives and making them available in a single integrated product experience. To that end in September, we launched a redesign of the core New York Times App to make it easier for people to find and engage with everything we have to offer. The redesign puts much more of our unmatched news reports in front of users with panels dedicated to today's headlines, important long-running storylines like the election, arts and culture coverage, and more. We've also made our lifestyle products easier to find, so users are just a swipe away from the best of games, The Athletic, cooking, Wirecutter, and audio. Beyond the redesign, we continued to innovate across formats in the quarter, which is part of our strategy to make audio, video, and other visual formats a bigger part of The Times. We made more of our coverage listenable by an automated voice, expanded the availability of our latest news show, The Headlines, increased production of modern love, and launched a weekly podcast from Wirecutter. We also began experimenting to make audio a more direct driver of subscriptions with new paid offerings available through Spotify and Apple. In video, we're experimenting with film diversions of many of our podcasts and putting our reporters on camera more often to explain the major stories of the day. NYT Games, beloved by users once again played a big role in getting millions of people to create direct daily relationships with The Times. This propelled growth in both subscriptions and advertising. We're optimistic that games will continue to be a growth engine as we keep innovating around new features, new games, and new ways to bring people to them. We've also made further progress in the quarter on The Athletic journey to become a household name amongst sports fans with strong coverage of the Olympics and great momentum at the start of the NFL and English Premier League seasons. The Athletics is already an important component of our bundle offering in more deeply engaging subscribers. We began testing it more directly as a driver of bundled subscriptions starts in Q3, which was enabled by the technical integration with The Times web domain that we completed in Q2. And we continue to be pleased with the overall economic performance and direction of The Athletics. Digital advertising revenue was up nearly 9% in the quarter in line with guidance. Ad growth reflected strong performance across all our lifestyle products as we broadened our ad offering and reached a wider set of marketers. This came even as some advertisers continue to avoid certain hard news topics. Revenue beyond subscriptions and advertising also met our expectations driven by another good quarter for Wirecutter and Licensing. Finally, we continued to be disciplined in how we grow the business, prioritizing investments in the areas that differentiate us, our world-class journalism, and premium product experiences. That discipline combined with strong execution resulted in another quarter of a peak growth and healthy free cash flow generation. I will 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 relationship and daily habits. That value takes many forms from landmark investigations to unrivaled coverage of important issues like the Middle East and the Rise of AI to expert recommendations on what to read or watch. The Times is where people go to follow their favorite NBA teams, play the daily game that their whole family loves, get holiday shopping tips or plan Thanksgiving dinner. All these complimentary sources of value address big user needs and in turn power multiple growing revenue streams. We believe our portfolio and our ability to keep adding value to it over time is what makes The Times resilient in a changing media landscape and well positioned to become a larger and more profitable company. Now let me turn it over to Will for more details.