Thanks, Ron. Good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide eight and review Q3 year-to-date financial results in more detail. Q3 revenue of $283.4 million declined 2.4% from $290.3 million in the prior year, or 2.2% excluding FX. The revenue decline was mainly attributable to lower eye and ear care category sales owing largely to Clear Eye supply constraints. As Ron mentioned, we also benefited from our broad distribution which drove sales growth in some of our largest channels. This helped offset continued consumer volatility and softness in certain categories like analgesics, and cough and colds. Adjusted EBITDA margin remained in the low thirties. Adjusted diluted EPS of $1.14 was down slightly versus $1.22 in the prior year, reflecting the lower sales timing of A&M spend and higher G&A costs. Last, please note these results exclude an approximate $10 million write-off of a supplier loan. Although not often, from time to time, we expect to extend secured financial liquidity to our third-party suppliers, to ensure continuity of supply. In this case, we decided to make a loan to a partner in fiscal 2024 as they explored a sale of their business and we transferred our products to other suppliers. That work has been completed without any meaningful disruption in supply, but the business shut down in December. Our loan is secured by the assets of the company, and while we expect some recovery, we cannot estimate the amount. As a result, we have written the full balance off at this time. Let's turn to slide nine for a discussion around consolidated results for the first nine months. For the first nine months of fiscal 2026, revenues decreased 3.9% organically versus the prior year. By segment, excluding FX, North America segment revenues decreased 4.4% and international segment revenues decreased 90 basis points versus the prior year. The first nine-month sales decline was largely due to the anticipated impact of the Clear Eye supply chain constraint. As Ron highlighted earlier, thanks to our channel diversity, we continue to benefit from strong growth in channels like e-commerce, which have offset negative trends in most other channels. Also impacting year-to-date sales was category softness in the analgesic, and cough and cold categories. Ron will note the implications of this when reviewing our outlook for the remainder of the year. Elsewhere, our international OTC segment business declined slightly year-to-date for two primary factors. First, we were impacted by the timing of distributor orders year-to-date but continue to see positive consumption trends. Two, similar to the US, our sales results continue to be impacted by the limited eye care production. Despite these near-term impacts, we continue to have confidence in our long-term growth algorithm for 5% annual segment revenue growth. Total company gross margin of 55.7% in the first nine months was up 50 basis points versus the prior year. Looking forward, we anticipate a 57% adjusted gross margin in Q4. Our fiscal year 2026 tariff outlook is unchanged at approximately $5 million. Advertising and marketing came in at 14.1% for the first nine months. For fiscal 2026, we now anticipate an A&M spend rate of just under 14% as a percent of sales. Adjusted G&A expenses were higher for the first nine months versus prior year, primarily due to the timing of certain expenses and also an increase in bad debt allowance in Q3 for one specific customer. We anticipate full-year G&A of just over 10% as a percent of sales. Finally, adjusted diluted EPS of $3.16 compared to $3.20 in the prior year as improved gross margin, more favorable interest expense, and share count helped offset the impact of lower revenue. Looking ahead, to reflect the latest assumptions following the closure of Pillar Five, and our recent share repurchase efforts. For Q4, we expect interest expense of approximately $11 million, an approximate normalized tax rate of 24%, and a share count of just under 48 million. Now let's turn to Slide 10 and discuss cash flow. For the first nine months, we generated $208.8 million in free cash flow, up 12.9% versus the prior year. We continue to maintain industry-leading free cash flow, and are maintaining our outlook for the full year of $245 million or more. For Q4, we do expect lower year-over-year quarterly free cash flow owing to timing and investments in working capital. At December 31, our net debt was approximately $1 billion equating to a covenant-defined leverage ratio of 2.6 times. Our strong financial position and consistent business performance continues to enable multiple uses of cash flow. In Q3, this included the closure of Pillar Five, as Ron discussed earlier, for just over $110 million as well as opportunistic share repurchases. Let's turn to slide 11 to review our year-to-date share repurchase efforts and our overall capital allocation strategy. Thanks to our strong financial profile and resulting free cash flow, optimal capital deployment is a valuable driver in enhancing long-term shareholder value. These priorities are unchanged. We anticipate disciplined cash deployment against the various options of investing in our brands, M&A, share repurchases, and deleveraging to further enable the first three priorities. This year is another example of our powerful capital deployment strategy at work. Through the meaningful cash generation and resulting debt reduction we've achieved over the last few years, we have leeway for multiple value-adding priorities at once. To that point, beyond just the recent acquisition of Pillar Five, we continue to actively assess M&A and see future opportunities to acquire leading consumer healthcare brands that can enhance our portfolio. But in tandem, we've also capitalized on a unique opportunity to repurchase our shares at what we believe are particularly attractive levels while still retaining flexibility to pursue M&A and other deployment options. As part of our multi-year share repurchase authorization, we've now repurchased over $150 million in shares year-to-date, or nearly 5% of shares outstanding. As shown on the right side of the page, the majority of these came in Q2 and Q3 opportunistically at attractive return levels. This is a textbook example of how our healthy leverage position and strong and steady free cash flow allows us to be nimble in capital deployment and generate incremental value. With that, I'll turn it back to Ron.