Thank you, Donna. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to our second quarter 2024 earnings call and webcast. Joining me today is Jon Bortz, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Tom Fisher, our Co-President and Chief Investment Officer. Before we begin, please note today’s comments are effective only for today, July 25, 2024, and our comments may include forward-looking statements as defined under federal securities laws, and actual results could differ materially from those discussed today. For a comprehensive analysis of potential risks, please consult our most recent SEC filings and visit our website for additional details and reconciliations of any non-GAAP financial measures we use. Now let’s move on to our second quarter results. We are pleased to share that our second quarter bottom line financial results well exceeded our outlook. Overall, hotel demand met our expectations, driven by healthy corporate group, business transient and solid leisure demand across most of our urban markets and resorts. Our newly redeveloped and repositioned properties are also performing well, capturing market share and improving cash flows, in line or exceeding our ramp-up expectations. Our Q2 RevPAR increased by 1.7% and total RevPAR rose by 2.5%, both of which were in the middle of our 2Q outlook range. Operationally, our efficiency and cost-saving initiatives were more than offset inflationary cost pressures. With slightly better-than-expected property tax reductions, our intense focus on operating efficiencies led to lower year-over-year operating expenses, substantially boosting hotel profitability. As a result, our same-property hotel EBITDA exceeded the midpoint of our Q2 outlook by a range of $5.2 million and topped the high-end of our outlook by $2.7 million. Adjusted EBITDA and adjusted FFO also benefited from higher-than-expected business interruption proceeds related to LaPlaya, further enhancing our positive Q2 performance. We exceeded the midpoint of our Q2 outlook for adjusted EBITDA and FFO by $10 million and at the top end by $7.5 million. Adjusted FFO per share outperformed our midpoint by $0.08 and exceeded the top of our Q2 outlook by $0.06. Additionally, we are raising our 2024 full year outlook for same-property hotel EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA and FFO, which Jon will elaborate on later in the call. Our urban markets continue to recover, with San Diego catching the biggest wave, bolstered by a robust convention calendar, good weather and the ramp-up of our recent property redevelopments. Our San Diego properties improved occupancy by 9 percentage points over the second quarter of 2023, rising to 81%. Recently, repositioned properties Margaritaville Hotel San Diego Gaslamp Quarter and Hilton San Diego Gaslamp Quarter propelled our Q2 San Diego RevPAR growth to an impressive 22.4%. Riding this wave of success, Chaminade Resort & Spa in Santa Cruz generated an almost 25% improvement in RevPAR, while Estancia La Jolla Hotel & Spa’s RevPAR increased over 28%. This epic performance from many of our coastal California properties inspired this quarter’s classic surfing song from the Beach Boys. Our other urban markets achieving healthy occupancy gains included Chicago, Boston and Washington, D.C. Underperforming urban markets in 2Q, which impacted our urban recovery were Portland, L.A. and San Francisco. Overall, our urban properties increased occupancy by 2.5 percentage points, driven by solid growth in corporate, group and transient demand, along with enhanced leisure bookings through expanded demand channels. We gained more demand through consortia demand channels such as American Express, Capital One and Costco as well as both domestic and international wholesale channels, albeit at slightly lower average rates. Urban weekday occupancies climbed by approximately 3 percentage points, while weekend occupancy grew by 1.4 percentage points in the second quarter. RevPAR at our urban properties increased 2.6%, while total RevPAR rose by 3.4%. Turning to our resort properties. We observed encouraging improvements in demand compared to the same quarter last year. Resort occupancy increased by 3.5 percentage points, driven by strong weekday demand growth from both corporate groups and rising weekend occupancy rates from leisure travelers. Weekday occupancy at our resorts improved by 3.2 percentage points, while weekend occupancy grew by 4.6 percentage points in the second quarter. Overall, resort RevPAR declined by 0.7%, primarily due to a 5.4% decrease in ADR. Although ADRs at resorts have continued to normalize, part of this decline is attributable to changes in segmentation. We’ve observed increased weekday demand from corporate groups, which is lower priced than our average transient rates. Additionally, we’ve added leisure occupancies from wholesale accounts and other discount channels. While these segments yield lower ADRs compared with the direct booking segments, corporate groups and consortia generate healthy levels of out-of-room spending. This contributed to the growth in total RevPAR at our resort properties, which improved by 0.6%. Despite the moderation in ADRs, our resorts have maintained a significant 30% premium in rates compared to 2019. The increase in demand from discount channels indicates that some leisure travelers, while still traveling, are becoming more price sensitive and seeking deals and bargains. The shift in customer behavior is one of the reasons we’ve adopted a more cautious top line outlook for the second half of the year. Regarding our segmentation in Q2, group demand increased by 2.4% over the same period last year, representing approximately 27% of our customer mix. This growth was primarily driven by a notable 11% rise in corporate group demand compared to the previous year. Overall, group revenue saw a 4% increase. Transient demand also strengthened with a 4.4% uptick over last year, supported by gains from OTAs, consortia, domestic and international wholesale and airline crew bookings. On a monthly basis, same-property RevPAR experienced a 2.2% decline in April, mainly due to the holiday shift and major conventions moving from April last year to May this year. This shift contributed to the substantial 6.9% RevPAR increase in May. June saw a modest rise of 0.4%, which was softer than we anticipated back in April. Early June was adversely affected by severe weather in Southern Florida, leading to increased cancellations and reduced bookings at our Florida resorts. Additionally, the Juneteenth holiday falling on a Wednesday this year, as opposed to Monday last year, negatively impacted both business and leisure demand for the week. Two properties not included in our same-property hotel EBITDA, Newport Harbor Island Resort and LaPlaya in Naples, delivered financial results – positive financial results for the quarter. Newport Harbor, which opened in late April, is being well received by guests and exceeded our expectations, generating $1.6 million in EBITDA. LaPlaya’s performance was in line with expectations, producing $7 million of EBITDA. Encouragingly, LaPlaya has generated $15.3 million of EBITDA year-to-date, compared to a loss of $3.7 million over the same period last year. Due to the resort’s positive momentum, we expect LaPlaya to contribute $24 million of EBITDA for the year, an increase of $2 million from our prior outlook. Additionally, we are increasing our 2024 BI estimate for LaPlaya by $3 million due to the better-than-expected progress with our insurance claim. These improved results have incorporated into our increased 2024 outlook. Our focused efficiency and cost reduction initiatives across all operating departments significantly bolstered our positive same-property EBITDA results. These efforts led to a hotel EBITDA margin of 31.5% in Q2, a 180 basis point improvement from the prior year quarter. This – departmental expenses increased by just 2% and undistributed expenses rose by only 2.9% despite an almost 13% increase in energy costs. Gross operating profit before fixed expenses rose by 3%. And on a per occupied room basis, total operating expenses declined by 3.8% and calculated before fixed expenses, they declined by 1.5%. This demonstrates our ongoing successful efforts to combat inflationary pressures through efficiency enhancements as we highlighted last quarter. We’ve put all of our operating processes and expenditures under a microscope, benchmarking every line item throughout the portfolio. These strategies are part of a broader initiative to offset above inflationary cost increases in wages, benefits, energy, and insurance across our portfolio. And speaking of insurance, we achieved a favorable outcome with our recent property and casualty insurance renewal completed on June 1. Overall, premiums will increase by about 5% compared to our expiring program. Notably, our insurance rates declined by approximately 1%, indicating improvements in the overall insurance market. We increased our insurable value by about 6% to reflect our estimates of higher replacement costs, and we’ve maintained the same overall total insurance coverage with no significant changes in premiums or other business terms. Turning to our $520 million strategic reinvestment program, we completed several major capital investments this quarter. The $50 million transformation of Newport Harbor Island Resort into our premier New England luxury destination was completed and fully launched on Memorial Day weekend, partially after opening at the end of April. And Estancia La Jolla Hotel & Spa, $26 million multi-phase redevelopment was completed in mid-April, receiving excellent reviews from existing customers and attracting new demand. And finally, at Skamania Lodge, we finished the $20 million first-phase redevelopment, introducing 8 new alternative lodging combinations, including 2 cabins, a 3-bedroom villa and 5 unique glamping units, all of which are booking up well over the busy summer period. We are excited to have a completely refreshed and redeveloped portfolio moving forward, and we expect these properties to continue to gain market share and drive cash and cash returns over the coming years. In our earnings release last night, we announced the upcoming conversion of Le Meridien Delfina Santa Monica into a Hyatt Centric Delfina Santa Monica, scheduled for mid-September of this year. The property will undergo an approximately $16 million refresh with the majority of costs offset by key money provided by Hyatt. The refresh, which primarily involves soft goods and FF&E replacements, will commence in the fourth quarter of this year, and we expect it to be completed in the second quarter of 2025. The hotel will continue to be managed by Highgate, who also manages our Viceroy Santa Monica property in the same market. So, we don’t anticipate any notable disruptions from the flag change or renovation. We are very excited about this flag change and we will only have – the only high-brand family property in the highly desirable Santa Monica Marina Del Rey market compared to the 7 competitors we currently have within the Marriott brand family. And overall, we remain on track to invest $85 million to $90 million in CapEx for the year, net of the high key money. Regarding our balance sheet, we remain in good shape with overall $110 million of cash on June 30 and no significant debt maturities until October 2025, thanks to the successful refinancing earlier this year. The weighted average cost of our debt is now an attractive 4.4% with 75% currently at fixed rates and 71% of our debt is unsecured. With that comprehensive update, I’d like to turn the call over to Jon. Jon?