Thank you, Ann. Let's start with the obvious good news. We are much better investors than apparently our conference call company is at managing calls. So, the good news will continue as we carry forward. Look, we're very pleased with the strong results we continue to report each quarter, reflecting the stable and predictable nature of Blue Owl's business in what is yet again an uncertain and volatile market backdrop. The past five years have presented a continuous series of challenges across COVID, persistent inflation, geopolitical tensions and now global tariffs. In contrast, Blue Owl has consistently demonstrated strong business performance through periods of upheaval with management fees growing over a 35% annual growth rate, since we listed as a public company. This growth has been underpinned by the defensive nature of our permanent capital and FRE-centric business and propelled by the strong levels of interest we've seen from investors for our differentiated investment strategies. Our business model is very simple at its core. We keep the vast majority of our AUM we raise. We continue to raise valuable new capital from an increasingly diversified set of sources across an increasingly broad spectrum of strategies and our earnings are highly predictable because they're management fee driven. Today, we're facing another shock to the system, where the flow of global trade and the price of that trade may be substantially altered going forward. There are many questions regarding inflation, economic growth, consumer demand, potential recession and more for which investors don't have concrete answers and may not for some time. So, we're reminded once again of the transitory nature of perceived liquidity and the benefits of permanent capital. We're fortunate to have a business model that is quite defensive during periods like these. In fact, we've said this before, we think our products are built precisely to give investors greater certainty and comfort during challenging and volatile markets. Our strategy is focused on downside protection, income generation and inflation protection. These characteristics are less exciting in boom markets, but act as structural guardrails for portfolios when markets are dislocated. Similarly, Blue Owl has been purpose built to be steady, stable and predictable through various environments. So, let me quickly highlight a few factors that contribute to this stability. First, approximately 90% of our management fees come from permanent capital. So, our revenues are highly resilient. Our business is also very U.S.-centric. The vast majority of our borrowers or tenants are domestically based and primarily serve domestic customers, which substantially limits any direct impact from tariffs. And we'll spend some time on the numbers around this in just a little bit. To add to that, we have over $23 billion of AUM that will begin to pay management fees once capital is deployed, which will drive an incremental $290 million of revenue or 13% growth off our current management fees over the last 12 months. In addition, we successfully completed the merger of OTF and OTF2 in March. Upon a listing, OTF will be the largest technology focused BDC in the public market and will drive another approximately $135 million of incremental annual management fees for Blue Owl. So, we have pretty good visibility into revenue growth, just from deployment and fee step ups, not counting any incremental fundraising. And we intend to be very front footed about opportunities that arise in this current environment. So, we've observed that during periods of elevated volatility, market share accrues to solutions providers like us, and people are willing to pay more for our valuable capital. We expect the same dynamic to play out this time around, if this uncertainty continues. In fact, we have already started to see instances of companies that had looked to issue public debt, now exploring direct lending solutions. Similarly, we are seeing elevated imbalance in alternative credit, as market participants expressed concerns about the availability of capital in traditional securitization markets. And the last point I want to make, which is something we've said often, but I think it carries even more weight today, is that our business is management fee and FRE driven. Our investors don't have to figure out whether carry or capital markets fees will be up or down over the next year. That predictability should be worth a premium during ordinary markets and becomes even more valuable today. So, to bring this home through our financial results, we have grown our management fees by 31%, our FRE by 23% and our DE by 20% on an LTM basis. Reflected in this growth are the significant investments we have continued to make globally across the private wealth and institutional channels, which have resulted in equity fundraising of nearly $30 billion, over the last 12 months, an increase of over 75% over the prior year. Over that same period, we capitalized on constructive syndicated markets to raise an incremental $19 billion of debt for our funds and vehicles, primarily in credit and real assets. Add it all, the nearly $50 billion of equity and debt capital we've raised over the last 12 months is approximately 30% growth of our AUM over a year ago. During the first quarter, we raised over $6.5 billion with $4 billion raised in private wealth, primarily across our perpetually distributed products and GP stakes. As we look further into 2025, we're seeing an increasingly diversified and global base of investors contributing to evergreen product flows with nearly $1 billion of capital closed on April 1. We're also making good progress on the launch of our alternative credit product focused on the wealth market and expect to be in a position to close out the private phase fundraise for this product at some point this summer. On the institutional side, we raised capital across a number of strategies, including digital infrastructure, net lease, direct lending, insurance solutions and alternative credit. Generally, we anticipate that institutional fundraising will step up over the course of 2025, given the expected timing of next vintage launches and ongoing fundraising. Turning to business performance. In direct lending, gross origination was nearly $13 billion and that was over $4.5 billion for the quarter, more than double our net origination in the prior quarter, reflecting robust add on activity across our portfolio and a declining level of refinancings. As I alluded to earlier, current market volatility is accruing to the benefit of private lenders, and we're having a fairly robust level of discussions. While it's hard to say what M&A will look like over the short-term, we have plenty of capital put to work and feel well-positioned for whatever is ahead. Our direct lending strategy was built for these types of markets, volatility and uncertainty. We feel very good about the credit quality of our portfolio. We've had a 13 basis point average annual realized loss rate, validating our rigorous underwriting standards. As I mentioned earlier, we have a philosophical preference for larger, domestically focused, services-oriented portfolio companies with high customer retention and re-up rates, which we think are more resilient business models. And remember, the portfolio is not a microcosm of the U.S. economy. Rather we think our loan book will prove out to be quite defensive, if we are facing a paradigm shift in global trade. In alternative credit, our funds announced a sizable commitment to SoFi, representing their largest loan platform business arrangement to date. We also entered into a significant forward flow agreement with Pagaya as a growing source of funding alongside Pagaya's ABS program. Below scale and capital flexibility are proven to be a great asset, as we enter into these arrangements, providing essential financing at an opportune time. Furthermore, as we highlighted during our recent Investor Day, we think this is a highly defensive strategy for investors as the amortizing nature of the assets creates enhanced downside protection with principal return on an accelerated basis, relative to even corporate credit strategies. Another layer of protection comes from our ability to turn the flow of financing on and off quickly. Similar to direct lending, we have very little direct exposure to tariffs in this strategy, as we are generally U.S.-focused, and we see an opportunity to accelerate market share as an alternative to securitization markets. To date, we have not seen any adverse changes in consumer credit and feel very good about the resilience of our portfolio. Now, this resilience carries over into our GP stake strategy, where our funds own stakes in highly diversified group of quality alternative asset managers. Over the past decade, the alternatives industry has grown AUM by roughly 10% annually. On the other hand, the managers in which we own stakes have grown their AUM by approximately 17% on average, 70% higher than industry growth. In keeping with the philosophy of our other businesses, we're providing valuable capital growth to a growth industry and the scale and certainty of capital we offer is an even shorter supply during periods of market instability. During the quarter, we made our first investment out of the latest large cap vintage into a prominent asset manager with whom we've had a long-standing relationship. In real assets, we continue to benefit from an inflationary environment and higher rates, as companies look to optimize their own balance sheets. This remains the best setup for deployment we've seen in a very long time. Our net lease strategy offers tenants crucial capital flexibility, while providing our investors attractive income with highly predictable cash flows, driven by investment grade and credit worthy counterparties, all with a tax advantaged attribute. We continue to see significant demand for this strategy. We're looking forward to providing updates on the path towards our next vintage drawdown fund in the near future. On the real estate credit strategy, we've been on offense during recent periods of dislocation, finding opportunities to upgrade the portfolio into market weakness for insurance and managed clients. In digital infrastructure, we continue to see this as a once in a generation opportunity to deploy with demand for capital and our differentiated technical expertise far as for passing supply. We held our final close from Fund 3 in April, reaching its hard cap of $7 billion, nearly double the size of the prior fund. And we remain on track to launch the next flagship vintage in 2026 along with a wealth dedicated product. Looking across real assets, we see substantial opportunities to harness the power of scale, flexible structuring and diversified pools of capital to construct bespoke differentiated solutions for our counterparties. This was the thesis in bringing these businesses together and it is absolutely playing out in real-time. So, bringing the conversation back to where we started. This is the type of environment, where our business is highly defensive on an absolute basis and where we should outperform even more on a relative basis. Every time we've seen a market dislocation, Blue Owl has demonstrated remarkable strength and consistency, and we have continued to march towards our long-term strategic goals. I expect we will do the very same this time around with the benefits of an even more scaled and diversified business. So, with that, let me turn it over to Alan to discuss our financial results.