Thanks, Jay. I wanted to step back and share a few of my thoughts and observations from my first few months as CEO. During the quarter, we held our franchisee conference. It was my first opportunity to address our franchise system in person and share my strategic imperatives with them to align our goals as they assess their capital deployment plans for 2025 and beyond. In my first 100 days, I visited more than 50 Planet Fitness clubs putting into action one of my core principles of feet on the street. I heard from our franchisees, managers and team members and gathered my own observations about how our members are experiencing our clubs. I’ve seen a lot of gyms in my day, and when you’re in one of our clubs, you know you’re in a Planet Fitness. They’re bright, clean and energizing with a friendly welcoming and approachable feel. Yet what really excites me is that we have an opportunity to build on our quality and modernize our experience to ensure our equipment, layout and floor plan consistently deliver for our members today and keep us relevant for tomorrow. Early consumer data and testing validates this opportunity. Another thing that continues to stand out to me is that our members made the important decision to join a Planet Fitness Club, which is very different than a store that has transactions with customers. This is where our members feel a sense of belonging and support, which is why we’re putting renewed emphasis on the club and our members. And importantly, we are all committed to delivering a high value member experience including our corporate team. This renewed focus informed a few changes we’ve implemented to communicate our culture of shared accountability, renaming our corporate headquarters to the Club Support Center, transitioning our corporate e-mail addresses and using clubs instead of stores when referring to a Planet Fitness location. A notable milestone during the quarter is that we raised the price of our classic card membership for all new members to $15. Adjusted for inflation, the $10 price in 1998 when we introduced it, would be about $20 today. In other words, the $15 classic card price is an even better value than $10 was when it was established more than 25 years ago. We felt it was prudent to implement the price increase ahead of Q3 to leave time for the market to absorb it before Q1, which has historically been our highest quarter for member growth. We believe the long-term benefits from the new price will outweigh any near-term softness in net member growth. Based on what we saw during our test, we expect that existing clubs will see a low to mid single-digit percentage increase to their top line after approximately a year of the price increase being in place. Our price increase applies to new joins only and classic card members who joined prior to the increase maintain the legacy $10 pricing, which could have favorability on our churn rate. At the same time, we believe the price increase will have an even greater impact for new clubs as most of their classic card members will be paying $15 per month. Tom will address the impact of the increase on Q3 later in his remarks. Additionally, we wrapped up our annual High School Summer Pass program during Q3 and nearly 3 million high school students participated, collectively logging more than 12 million workouts. We’ve invested more than $300 million in waived membership dues to promote use health and wellness during the four years that we’ve run the program. We’re incredibly proud to have had a meaningful impact on the lives of millions of teams as we introduce them to positive health and fitness habits and build brand loyalty with this important generation. Let me now turn to a recap of our four strategic imperatives that will guide us during our next phase of growth. We’re making several important pivots to evolve our brand to focus on what matters most to our members and to ensure that we maintain our industry leadership. First is to redefine our brand strategy and pull it through our marketing. Second is enhancing our member experience. Third is refining our product and optimizing our format. And fourth is accelerating new club growth. I’ll start with redefining our brand strategy. We’re evolving our strategy to go beyond getting people off the couch. We’re broadening our audience to include current and previous members, non-members and competitive members. We continue to see a significant percentage of our joins who are former fitness members. So we want to convey that we welcome beginners and returning gym-goers. In a recent consumer survey that we conducted, including both members and non-members, there was a proportion of respondents who did not see Planet Fitness as a place where they can progress or advance on their fitness journey presenting a clear area of opportunity for us. We are doubling down on our efforts to establish Planet Fitness as the club that welcomes all fitness levels from beginners to more advanced, whether they’re starting a fitness journey or running another marathon. We’re the club for anyone who is seeking a fitness community with no gymtimidation, where members support each other to fulfill the promise of growing stronger together. We believe this is the right evolution at the right time for our brands. This focus was part of our marketing messaging for our Strong Choice October sale. We ran a social media campaign in late summer that compared our 75-pound dumbbell to a higher priced gym’s dumbbell of equal weight which demonstrated value while evolving our humor to convey that we take fitness seriously, but we don’t take ourselves too seriously. We’re beginning the shift to communicating the high value of a Planet Fitness membership versus primarily focusing on our low price and using our marketing to demonstrate the breadth of high quality top-tier equipment in our clubs. Looking ahead, our first quarter marketing plans are well underway and we’re actively working on new creative assets with our agency partners. We’re also excited to be returning for our tenth year as the presenting sponsor of the Times Square New Year’s Eve celebration. Lastly, on brand strategy, we’re encouraged by the progress we’re making in our ongoing search for a Chief Marketing Officer, and we look forward to providing an update in the future. Now to our second imperative, enhancing member experience. We want members to know that the value of their Planet Fitness membership goes beyond the four walls of the club. We’re using technology to enhance the member experience and drive value and engagement. Planet Fitness is the most downloaded fitness app on the App Store. This gives us a great opportunity to deliver content to support our members on their wellness and fitness journey even when they’re not in one of our clubs, whether that’s doing workouts on the PF app or taking advantage of discounts through our PF Perks program. Deals and discounts with relevant partners can enhance the member value proposition beyond the club experience and potentially help to reduce churn. Year-to-date, our members have saved a total of approximately $7 million with an average of more than $50 per redemption through our Perks program. So we know there’s significant potential as we continue to grow the offerings in the PF app. We’re also rolling out a more uniform way to collect member feedback on a system-wide basis. Many of our franchisees have consumer feedback systems in place but now we’re implementing a standardized system to analyze this information across our state. This will give us better line of sight and enable us to be faster to respond to member feedback about their experiences in our clubs. We’re also confident that enhancing our member experience will further improve AUVs. This leads to our third strategic imperative, refining our product and optimizing our format. This is about updating our experience to meet the needs of today’s consumer. We’re not putting something in a club just because we’ve always done it that way. We’re modernizing our offerings based on what consumers’ value today while being mindful of our franchisees’ P&Ls and capital obligations. Preserving our efficient operating model remains an important aspect of our business. For example, we’ve moved from a large span of cardio equipment to a more balanced footprint of cardio and strength. Two years ago, the standard was roughly 100 pieces of cardio and today, it’s about 70. We did this based on industry trends that showed consumer preference for strength as well as how we observed members using the equipment in our clubs. This saves our franchisees money on new builds and re-equips, while making our clubs more relevant for today’s member, so they don’t feel like they need to graduate to another gym. In collaboration with our franchisees, we rolled out a program to add additional pieces of strength equipment in existing clubs before it becomes a standard for new builds and re-equips in 2025. More than 60% of our clubs or more than 1,700 will have the additional pieces of strength equipment in place by the end of this year through voluntary opt-in by our franchisees. The uptake greatly exceeded our expectations, which will drive equipment sales up in Q4 beyond what was included in our outlook. Tom will address how this impacts our full year guidance. We’re also working to optimize the space within existing clubs. Removing some of the less utilized cardio equipment frees up floor space, allowing franchisees to move the equipment from the 30 minute workout area to other places on the club floor. This provides additional floor space for members to grab a mat and weights and do their workout in an open area in the club, a need we observed when visiting our clubs and speaking with our club managers. This is a great example of a format optimization pivot we were able to make quickly that does not add any cost to our franchisees. Finally, our fourth imperative is accelerating new club growth. We have a responsibility to put club economics in the sight line of everything we do. Our goal is to drive the top line, while enhancing the bottom line and reduce capital cost to enable our system to turn up the afterburners on growth. Before I joined Planet Fitness, two critical pieces were in place to enhance what were already strong club level returns, the new growth model and the decision to increase the Classic Card Price. While we’ve been discussing the new growth model for several quarters now, it’s important to note that clubs that were built or underwent an equipment replacement cycle in Q2 and Q3 were the first to see the cost benefits from this initiative. Clubs that opened in Q3 also had the added benefit of the price increase. While these are meaningful changes, we are continuing to look for ways to reduce the new club build cost to further enhance the economics for our franchisees. Looking ahead, we have a tremendous opportunity to grow domestically in both new and existing markets across the country. Our long-term target of 5,000 clubs in the U.S. is based primarily on our 20,000 square foot traditional Planet Fitness. At the same time, we continue to work on smaller footprint clubs for infill locations and for less populated areas, which would further our domestic opportunity. We also have plans to grow internationally in strategic markets where we can achieve scale, density, and market leadership. We will continue to build our presence in newer markets such as Mexico, Spain, and Australia. We’re also excited about the progress we’re making in our search for a Chief Development Officer and will provide updates when appropriate. In closing, during our recent franchisee conference, there was palpable enthusiasm for continued growth with Planet Fitness. We laid out our plans to redefine our brand positioning and brand promise and showed an early peek at some of the marketing in the works to drive joins. We also shared tools and initiatives to enhance our member experience and reduce churn, including some cool tech enhancements on the horizon. And we reiterated our commitment to refining our product offering to stay relevant for today’s member, while being mindful of build costs. We are invigorated by the spirit of excitement across our system and look forward to discussing updates on our progress and our 2025 outlook on our call in February. Now I will turn it over to Tom.