Thanks Jeremy and good morning everyone. As with Jeremy's remarks, most of my comments will focus on our U.S. Media segment as these are the primary operations going forward. For a deeper dive into our financial statements, please turn to Slide 8 for a more detailed look at our U.S. Media expenses. Total U.S. Media expenses were up just under $10 million or just over 3% year-over-year. U.S. Media billboard lease expense was up 1% versus last year. Small increases on a portion of our inventory on fixed rates were partially offset by lower revenues on the portion of our inventory operated on leases with revenue share arrangements primarily located in New York and Los Angeles. U.S. Media transit franchise expense was up 2% versus the prior year principally due to higher MAG payments to the MTA and higher revenues on contracts operated under revenue shares, partially offset by the non-renewal of a loss making contract and small benefits from amendments to the existing transit agreements. U.S. Media posting, maintenance and other expenses were up about 10% versus the prior year primarily due to higher compensation related expenses and an increase in business activity driving higher posting and rotation costs. U.S. Media SG&A expense grew less than 3% or just over $2 million during the quarter due to higher compensation related expenses partially offset by lower professional fees and smaller provision for doubtful accounts. Slide 9 provides additional detail on the sources of U.S. Media OIBDA. Total U.S. Media OIBDA was up 11% to just over $133 million. U.S billboard OIBDA was up 8% to $136 million, which represents a margin of 37.8%, up 110 basis points year-over-year. Transit OIBDA improved by about $3 million to a loss of just under $3 million. The improvement was primarily due to the better revenue Jeremy described earlier in the call. On Slide 10 you can see our combined U.S. Media and Corporate OIBDA which was up about 6% to approximately $117 million. Q3 corporate expense was up $6.7 million. The majority was due to consulting fees and the impact of market fluctuations on an unfunded equity linked retirement plan. Turning to capital expenditures on Slide 11, Q3 U.S. Media CapEx spend was $17.6 million including $5.5 million of maintenance expense. Growth CapEx was up slightly while maintenance CapEx was down about $2 million. For the full year we believe we will spend approximately $85 million of total CapEx towards the higher end of our prior range, including some spends complete repairs related to Hurricane Milton. We ended the quarter with a little more than 1900 digital billboards, up 17 from the end of the second quarter and representing under 5% of our total billboard inventory. In transit, we added nearly 1400 digital displays in the U.S. in the third quarter. As has been the case thus far this year, the installations were mostly small format screens on subway and train cars in the New York MTA and we are happy to confirm that we have substantially completed our initial deployment commitment. While speaking of the New York MTA, hopefully you noticed that we did not have an impairment charge this quarter as we currently expect net positive cash flows through the end of the amended term of the MTA agreement. As such, we would not expect to incur additional impairment charges going forward on our MTA equipment deployment cost spending. Now turning to consolidated AFFO on Slide 12, you can see the bridge on our Q3 AFFO of nearly $81 million. The $5 million year-over-year increase was due to higher U.S. Media OIBDA, lower interest expense, lower U.S. Media maintenance CapEx and lower other maintenance CapEx partially offset by lower other OIBDA principally related to the Canada sale and corporate expense. For 2024, we expect that reported consolidated AFFO will be between $295 million and $300 million. Please turn to Slide 13 for an update on our balance sheet. Committed liquidity is over $600 million, including around $30 million of cash, almost $500 million available via revolver and $110 million available under our accounts receivable securitization facility. As of September 30th, our total net leverage was 5.0 times, down from 5.4 times year end of 2023. We expect to continue to delever within our 4 to 5 times target range through adjusted OIBDA growth. Turning to our dividend, we announced today that our Board of Directors approved a $0.75 per share special dividend totaling about $125 million, payable on December 31st to shareholders of record at the close of business on November 15. About $50 million or $0.30 per share will be paid in cash, the same per share amount as the three common dividends paid earlier this year and the remaining $0.45 per share, or about $75 million, we paid in shares of our common stock. Stockholders will have the option to elect to receive their special dividend in all cash or all stock. However, if the aggregate amount of stockholder cash elections exceeds the $49.8 million cash limit, then the payment of such cash elections will be made on a pro rata basis to shareholders who made the cash election with the balance paid in shares of common stock. Please refer to our SEC filing for further information on the special dividend election process. This special dividend represents the projected excess remaining balance of 100% of the company's 2024 distributable REIT income beyond the cash dividends paid earlier this year and has been sized to maximize the tax savings afforded to us by the REIT structure as well as retain the deleveraging effect of the Canada sale completed in June. To offset the small dilutive impact of the common stock portion of the special dividend, our Board of Directors also approved a reverse stock split to return our aggregate share count to pre-stock dividend levels, which we expect to complete in January of 2025. There were no large or notable acquisitions made during the quarter looking at our current acquisition pipeline, we expect to complete about a total of $25 million of acquisitions this year. Before I pass the call back to Jeremy, I'll take a moment to explain some accounting revisions in our documents. In connection with finalizing our results for the third quarter, we identified an error related to the treatment of non-controlling interest on our balance sheet involving a few of our historical consolidated joint ventures. As noted in our earnings release, we concluded that the error was not material to our previously issued financial statements, but would require revisions to our current and comparative periods with respect to certain equity line items on our balance sheet and our consolidated statements of equity. There is no impact on our total assets and liabilities, income statement, statement of cash flows, OIBDA or AFFO related to this matter. As an administrative matter, we also decided to voluntarily revise our previously issued financial information to reflect the immaterial out of period adjustment related to variable billboard property lease costs that was already recorded and disclosed in the first quarter of 2023. Please refer to our SEC filings for further information on the revisions. In closing, it was a good quarter and we look forward to running through the tape to the end of the year. With that, let me turn the call back to Jeremy.