Thanks, Bill. In my remarks today, I’ll discuss our Q1 financial performance and our preliminary Q2 outllk. All financial metrics except for revenue will be discussed in non-GAAP terms unless otherwise specified. And as a reminder, all comparisons will be discussed on a year-over-year basis unless otherwise noted. Stepping back, this time last year, our users were declining and pricing on our platform was elevated. A lot has changed since then, our investments in the core Pinterest experience, including improvements in relevance and personalization are user reactivation engines and adding new content, including video, have been major contributors to user and engagement growth. Additionally, we saw pricing ease over the last two quarters as we unlocked more supply through engagement gains and ad load management on the platform. While digital advertising remains challenging, we’re building for the long-term and we’ve made significant progress to turn Pinterest into an attractive platform for advertisers through lower, mid, and upper funnel ad formats and tools, as well as new measurement solutions. Turning to users. In Q1, 463 million monthly active users came to Pinterest, growing 7%, adding roughly 30 million users compared to a year ago and growing across all regions. In the U.S. and Canada, monthly active users were 95 million, growing 1%. We had 128 million monthly active users in Europe, which grew 7%, our strongest growth in two years. And in our rest of world markets, we had 240 million monthly active users up 9%. In addition to growing our users, our investments are driving more depth of engagement with our core and new users. We measure depth of engagement by looking at a basket of metrics such as impressions, sessions, and time spent. In Q1, these metrics grew faster than our user base, which indicates that we’re making good progress on this front. Turning to our financial performance, Q1 global revenue of $603 million grew approximately 5% on a reported basis and 6% excluding the impact from foreign exchange rates. Our awareness objective demonstrated strong growth in the quarter as brand advertisers took advantage of higher engagement and lower CPMs on the platform. Revenue growth from our conversion objectives remained resilient as we continue to demonstrate the value of our lower funnel format and measurement products. International was also a strong contributor to growth and accounted for nearly 20% of total revenue buoyed by traction from large and SMB advertisers. Finally, emerging verticals were a source of strength with solid growth from several non-core categories such as travel and autos. Advertisers in these verticals are turning to Pinterest to harness the unique commercial intent that our users express on our platform. For example, Southwest Airlines leaned into spring break search activity on Pinterest by utilizing the Pinterest trends tool as a planning guide. Southwest featured Pins of exciting destinations that drove flight searches on their site. Breaking out revenue by region, U.S. and Canada revenue was $486 million, an increase of 3%. Total revenue from Europe was $93 million, growing 12% on a constant currency basis or 6% on a reported basis. And total revenue from our rest of world region was $24 million, growing 42% on a constant currency basis and 38% on a reported basis. We’re confident that the intent-based shopping mindset that our users bring when they come to Pinterest, coupled with improvements in shopping on the platform and our conversion-based ads business will bode well for advertisers in the long term. Now I’d like to discuss our expense profile and EBITDA. Cost of revenue came in at $167 million and declined 6% sequentially as we continued to efficiently manage our infrastructure costs. Operating expenses were $413 million for the quarter, a 15% increase year-over-year, and a 19% decrease quarter-over-quarter. This was lower than our guidance for two reasons. First, we shifted some investments from Q1 into Q2, and later in the year, And second, we made further progress on our expense control across business functions. Adjusted EBITDA was $27 million in the quarter with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 4%. As Bill mentioned, we announced a restructuring plan at the end of March in order to reallocate our resources against our highest priority areas. This resulted in a charge of approximately $121 million of which $113 million is non-cash. On our capital allocation strategy, as we mentioned last quarter, our Board of Directors authorized a share repurchase program of up to $500 million to help manage dilution from stock-based compensation. We’ve made progress repurchasing over $100 million worth of shares through April 2024. Finally, we ended the quarter with approximately $2.7 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities. Before I discuss our Q2 financial guidance, I wanted to provide some additional context on our monthly active user trends. Q2 is our seasonally softest quarter as people tend to travel and spend more time outside starting in June. This seasonality is particularly pronounced for us as we measure monthly active users on a 30-day look back from the last day in June. In addition, we expect that some of the recent updates we made like mandatory birthday collection will moderate the rate of year-over-year growth in the second quarter. However, we continue to invest in product experiences that we believe will grow users, drive deeper engagement and improve monetizable supply over time. Now onto our revenue guidance. The ads market continues to be uncertain, given the macroeconomic environment. We’ve seen stabilization and while Q1 growth was marginally better than Q4, we still did not have visibility into an acceleration in demand. As a result, we expect our second quarter year-over-year revenue growth to be roughly consistent with the growth we saw over the last two quarters in the fourth quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023. While foreign exchange headwinds are moderating, we still expect a small impact in Q2, which is reflected in our guide. Moving to our non-GAAP operating expense outlook. We expect our Q2 operating expenses to grow low teams percentage points quarter-over-quarter, partially due to shifting some investments from Q1 to Q2. As a reminder, our OpEx outlook does not include the cost of revenue. Finally, as it relates to stock-based compensation, our annual employee equity merit awards will be granted in the second quarter, so we expect stock-based compensation to increase sequentially from Q1 levels. Now, I’ll turn the call back over to Bill for some final comments.