Thanks, Jeremy, and good afternoon, everyone. Before getting to the detailed financials, I'd like to say a few words about my friend and colleague, Jeremy Male. Towards the end of last year, you may have noticed he announced his retirement from OUTFRONT. In his nearly 11 years as CEO, Jeremy navigated the company through its separation from CBS with its initial public offering, the subsequent conversion to a REIT corporate structure, a rapid digitization of assets and a pandemic that produced the most challenging operating environment the out-of-home industry has ever seen. OUTFRONT would not be the industry-leading company it is today without his vision and leadership and all of us here wish him well in all his future endeavors. Now let's turn to our financial statements. Please look at Slide 11 for a more detailed look at our billboard expenses. In total, global expenses were up a little under $2 million or less than 1% year-over-year. Billboard lease costs were down almost $6 million or about 5% due primarily to the exit of the billboard portfolio in New York that Jeremy mentioned earlier and lower payments on revenue share leases. Posting maintenance and other expenses were up a little under $5 million or 14% due to higher maintenance and utilities costs, compensation expense, and production costs. Included in this increase was approximately $2 million of storm-related costs in the Southeast. SG&A expenses rose under $3 million or 4.3% due to higher commissions and network costs. These expenses, combined with the 2% billboard revenue growth Jeremy described earlier, led to billboard adjusted OIBDA rising nearly $6 million or almost 4%. We are pleased to see billboard adjusted OIBDA margin increased by 80 basis points year-over-year to 40.3%. Turning to transit on Slide 12. In total, transit expenses were up $1.4 million year-over-year. Transit franchise expense was up under $0.5 million or less than 1% as contractually obligated increases to the MTA were partially offset by lower payments to other franchises. Posting maintenance and other expenses were up just under $2 million due primarily to maintenance and utilities costs and higher compensation. SG&A expenses fell by approximately $1 million or 5%, primarily due to lower professional fees. Combined with the 9% transit revenue growth described earlier, transit adjusted OIBDA rose over $8 million with the $22 million of adjusted OIBDA generated in the quarter, it is nice to see this segment return to profitability for the full year. While on transit, I'd like to take a moment to update some of our expectations for the New York MTA in 2025. Our MAG payments for the MTA will step up by about 4% this year to approximately $156 million given the New York City CPI escalator contained within the contract. We will continue to account for our MTA franchise expense on a straight line basis throughout the year. As we mentioned on our last call, our initial build-out of the MTA digital network is substantially complete. We expect to spend around $35 million this year, principally to replace aged and broken screens. Looking forward, we currently expect that this spend will be in the same range annually through the end of the contract in 2030. Per our quarterly analysis, we remain confident the contract will be both OIBDA and cash flow positive through the end of this period. Slide 13 shows the Company's combined billboard transit and corporate adjusted OIBDA in the fourth quarter. We consider this an important measure given these represent essentially the entire company moving forward. Corporate expense rose by about $2 million, primarily due to higher compensation and professional fees. Combined with the billboard and transit OIBDA I covered earlier, adjusted OIBDA totaled about $155 million, up 8.5% from the comparable measure in the prior year period. Turning to capital expenditures on Slide 14. Q4 CapEx spend was $18 million, including about $4 million of maintenance spend. For the full year, total CapEx was about $78 million, including $6 million related to our divested Canadian business. For 2025, we expect to spend approximately $85 million of CapEx. About $35 million of this total will be for maintenance, which includes $10 million to replace aging digital billboards. We commenced our installation of digital boards in 2007 and while many of our earliest installations still look great, we believe replacing some of these older screens with new state-of-the-art technology will help drive revenue growth. Looking at AFFO on Slide 15, you can see the bridge to our Q4 AFFO of $119 million. The improvement is principally driven by higher billboard and transit OIBDA and lower interest expense, partially offset by lower other OIBDA all of which was related to our now divested Canadian subsidiary. As Jeremy mentioned earlier, we ended 2024 with $308 million of AFFO, nicely ahead of the guidance we provided at the start of the year. For 2025, we currently expect reported consolidated AFFO growth in the mid-single-digit range driven principally by improvement in OIBDA. Please turn to Slide 16 for an update on our balance sheet. Committed liquidity is nearly $700 million, including almost $50 million of cash, about $500 million available by our revolver, and $140 million available via our accounts receivable securitization facility. As of December 31, our total net leverage was 4.7 times, down from 5.4 times at the end of 2023 and well within our four to five times target range. We remain comfortable with our debt stack with our next maturity not until late 2026. Turning now to our dividend. We announced today that our Board of Directors maintained a $0.30 cash dividend payable on March 31 to shareholders of record at the close of business on March 7. We spent approximately $8 million on acquisitions during the quarter, bringing our total for 2024 to just under $20 million. We also spent around $24 million in cash and non-cash consideration to buy the outstanding 49% non-controlling interest in one of our consolidated subsidiary joint ventures, increasing our total spend on adding assets to over $40 million. Looking at our current acquisition pipeline, we expect our 2025 deal activity to remain at a similar level to those seen in the last couple of years. In closing, we accomplished a lot last year and are fully focused on delivering a great 2024. With that, let me turn the call over to our Interim CEO, Nick Brien.