Good morning, everyone. We are pleased with the results of our second quarter and our continued execution against our 2023 strategic plan. We expanded our restaurant margins by 240 basis points year-over-year to 21%, a function of us producing the highest restaurant operating profitability flow-through on sales growth since 2015 the year that Shake Shack went public. With this improvement and discipline on other expense lines, we generated a record high $37 million of adjusted EBITDA, 13.6% of total revenue marking 370 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion year-over-year. Before diving into our financials though I wanted to take some time to share progress in the quarter that contributed to our strong restaurant margin outperformance. To start, despite our continued elevated inflationary pressures, we have preserved a good portion of our profitability by taking a strategic approach to pricing and widening the price differential across our markets to match regional and guest dynamics. But pricing alone did not bring us to today's strong results. As part of our work on our 2023 strategic plan, over the past few quarters, we've identified and executed against opportunities for operational improvements that contributed to the significant portion of our year-over-year margin expansion this quarter. Many of these are still early days in the making and we are building on them as we progress throughout the year. So first, we are working closely with our operators on execution improvement plans across our Shacks. Major call-outs here are better alignment on new standards and demand generated labor schedules, further increasing operating hours, driving waste reduction, T&E discipline and other initiatives. We are leveraging fresh weekly sales forecasts in our Shacks to schedule labor incorporating macro and micro drivers. This is helping us be more nimble in our expense management when sales tides turn or even just modestly shift at the Shack level in either direction. Second, our Kiosk retrofit plan is already showing substantial impact and we see a long runway for future improvements that can enhance what Kiosk can offer in terms of driving sales and labor efficiencies. We ended the quarter with nearly 250 Shacks of Kiosks and grew our Kiosks sales by more than 100% year-over-year. We are seeing at least a high single-digit percent lift in average order values in Kiosk versus in Shack. This is driven by higher IPC and mix. as Kiosk orders tend to skew to dine in, we are also able to use less packaging than in our digital orders. but labor savings aside, this makes Kiosk our most profitable channel. Kiosk is also a channel, where we can get more guest data to learn and improve our marketing efforts over time, and our Shacks with Kiosks are able to operate with fewer labor hours. We look to build on this incremental sales lift and early in labor as we drive deeper kiosk adoption, advance our Kiosk capabilities and capitalize from added efficiencies in the Shack. Additionally, we've also streamlined our packaging, condiments and utensils standards for to-go orders. And our teams have been rebuilding our training programs for both new openings and existing Shacks with the help of our Head of Operations Training Support. This includes how we hire for a new Shack opening and how and where we train, as well as simplifying our training program to allow our team members greater flexibility as to what stations they can work during their shifts. Early indications are that these initiatives will have a positive impact on our throughput and reduce our average preopening expense. Finally, we're also working with our operators to enhance the auditing and reporting in our Shacks to more quickly address over and understaffing situations, as well as making sure that we have the appropriate number of managers to support our Shacks and our growth. We are still early days in this journey, but we are confident that this will help us better control our hourly labor expense and provide a more consistent guest experience. We are reassured by our results and we look forward to showing continued progress through the rest of the year on these and other initiatives that we have in flight in order to improve on our profitability and deliver great guest experiences. onto the second quarter results, total revenue was $271.8 million, up 17.8% year-over-year. Shack sales grew 17.4% to $261.8 million. Licensing revenue grew 29.8% to $10 million. System-wide sales reached a record high at $426.3 million, up 21.2% year-over-year. We maintained discipline on expenses integral to our 2023 strategic plan. We grew adjusted EBITDA by 61.9% year-over-year to $37.1 million, reaching 13.6% of total revenue. We grew in-Shack traffic by 4.7% in the quarter and we generated a positive 10.7 same-Shack sales in our in-Shack channel as more guests are migrating to their in-person habits and our wider scale kiosk rollout is having a positive impact on our mix and IPC trends in that channel. in-Shack and Kiosk in particular are our most profitable channels and we continue to focus our efforts on shifting our sales here as we execute against our plan to show sustained improvement in our overall restaurant margin. Our strong in-Shack performance was offset by softer digital performance. Delivery traffic was down more than overall traffic representing the continued positive trend towards our guests returning to our Shacks. Also, from time to time, as we deepen our footprint in open Shacks close to others, we may see near-term traffic offsets as those neighborhoods and shared delivery radiuses take time to shake out. And this was the case in the second quarter as we saw some sales impact that was heavily weighted on delivery in markets such as California and a handful of Shacks on the East Coast that we had planned for as we build critical mass in these key markets. this blended to an overall positive 3.0% same-Shack sales and negative 1.3% traffic versus prior year. We realized high single-digit price in the quarter. We rolled off the comp benefit from the March 2022, 3.5% total menu price increase and an additional 5% premium in our delivery channels. And we're only raising price by 2% in select locations at the back half of the second quarter. Our 2Q same-Shack sales were pressured by approximately 100 basis points of mix as we sold out of our premium white Truffle LTO ahead of schedule due to high and unexpected guest demand. It's hard to know the full traffic impact that this had on the quarter though. In addition, we continue to see guests shift back to in-Shack. And this had smaller group sizes than our digital channels, but we also saw smaller group sizes across all of our channels as people returned to more normalized patterns, especially in our urban areas. July's same-Shack sales rose 4.5%, an improvement from June driven by improving mix. July AWS was 77,000 and that was 3% higher year-over-year. we generated record high Kiosk average weekly sales and continued to grow in-Shack traffic. Our urban markets such as Washington D.C., Boston and New York City performed well. We had a positive impact from high single-digit price. Our licensed partners opened 13 new Shacks in the quarter, growing our total licensed Shack count to 201. Together, we grew sales by 27.9% year-over-year to $164.5 million with a modest headwind from FX. We grew sales in our domestic license business by more than 50% year-over-year, led by our airports and roadway locations. we had robust performance in China. We opened strong in Thailand and that was our first new country open in three years. In June, we opened our first licensed drive through Shack in Dubai. onto our restaurant profitability in the second quarter, Shack level operating profit was $54.9 million, or a 21% of Shack sales marking 240 basis points of expansion versus last year despite continued inflationary pressures across our four-wall P&L. food and paper costs were $75.8 million or a 29% of Shack sales down 100 basis points versus last year and 40 basis points versus the prior quarter. We benefited from improved waste trends in our Shacks and reduced packaging, small wares and condiment usage in our off-premise orders. Blended food and paper inflation rose high single digits year-over-year. Beef was up high single digits, as well as continued inflationary pressures in custard and buns, and an over 20% year-over-year increase in our fry costs. Importantly, our supply chain team has identified areas for cost efficiencies to help address persistent inflationary pressures, which we anticipate to start having an impact later this year with continued plans for focused improvement into 2024. Labor and related expenses were $75.2 million, or a 28.7% of Shack sales, down 80 basis points versus last year and down 170 basis points quarter-over-quarter. This quarter, we increased our focus on training to improve turnover and seek efficiencies across our operations, as well as introduce several new strategies to better control our labor expenses within the Shacks. Our second quarter has typically marked our strongest sales and profitability of the year, and requires more staffing than other quarters to support the higher demand. However, with our profitably enhancement strategies including dynamic sales and labor budgeting, working closely with our operators to drive more standardized labor scheduling practices, as well as early learnings on kiosk labor utilization and evolutions in training. we've been able to streamline hourly labor in our Shacks both quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. Altogether, this is translated to us using 50 fewer hours per Shack per week in the quarter versus last year, resulting in 100 basis points of margin tailwind versus 2022. As is typical for our growing business, our labor expense was impacted by supporting some recent NSOs. However, our profitability trends in our NSOs improved throughout the quarter, and we have plans in place and operations and development to further reduce the expense we incur from new opening schedules on our overall restaurant profitability line. Other operating expenses were $36.1 million, or a 13.8% of Shack sales, down 60 basis points from the second quarter of 2022. We’re focused on investing in scaled marketing in the quarter, where we see broad-based impacts and benefited from lower delivery sales as guests returned to their in-Shack dining. Our facilities team has been actively replacing older equipment to reduce R&M expense and while this expense impacts our CapEx, these investments have helped us reduce our R&M by an average of $100 per store week year-over-year. Occupancy and related expenses were $19.8 million, or a 7.6% of Shack sales flat sequentially and up 10 basis points from last year's level. We ended the quarter with 471 Shacks system-wide, 43% of which are operated by our licensed partners and 57% of which are company operated. In the quarter, G&A was $31.5 million excluding $1.7 million in professional fees related to a one-time matter. adjusted G&A was $29.8 million, or 11% of total revenue, 150 basis points favorable to last year. Our 2Q adjusted G&A expense rose 3.6% year-over-year versus total revenue that grew 17.8% year-over-year. We made key investments in technology, marketing, operations and our licensed business as we execute against strategies to grow our sales and profitability and support new Shack openings in our company operated and licensed business. We're making continued invest around our digital marketing efforts, leveraging personalized marketing to our guests, investing in guest data and analytics, and our Kiosks and other various marketing strategies to drive greater sales and brand awareness. We're also investing in technology and data broadly across the company automating labor scheduling and compliance, as well as making improvements in our supply chain, among other initiatives, which we believe are critical to our long-term success, our ability to support our growth and to realize continued efficiencies over time. In operations and development, we've made investments in our teams to support new openings, as well as test and learn strategies and tools, which we believe have the potential to improve throughput and take costs out of our Shacks over the long term. In our international license business, we have announced five new country openings in the past few years, including Israel and Canada that our teams are busy supporting. We have also had a strong pipeline of potential new countries, as well as deeper expansion opportunities within current markets, leveraging a growing number of formats. But taken overall, the investments we made in the second quarter were partially offset by efficiencies in other departments as we continue to invest with discipline, and G&A and target delivering leverage this year. preopening costs were $5.6 million in the quarter with our more even weighted development schedule versus last year. At the end of the third quarter, we expect to have opened 27 units compared to 14 in the prior year. We have plans in place around development, training and operations as we target lowering our preopening expenses by about 10% per Shack in 2024 versus this year's level. In the quarter, depreciation was $22.3 million, up 23% year-over-year as we continue to invest in new Shacks. we realized net income attributable to Shake Shack Inc. of $6.9 million or $0.16 per diluted share. We reported an adjusted pro forma net income of $7.9 million or $0.18 per fully exchanged and diluted share. This was the highest level of earnings per share that we have had reported in more than three years. Our adjusted pro forma tax rate, excluding the tax impact of equity-based compensation was 15.6%. Finally, our balance sheet remains solid with $295.2 million in cash and cash equivalents, and marketable securities at the end of the quarter. This was an increase from $293.4 million in the prior quarter. We invested $40.4 million in CapEx in the quarter, up 48% year-over-year. We have opened 21 Shacks to date and are on track for twice the number of openings by the end of the third quarter versus last year. This more even weighted opening schedule is a primary driver behind the growth in our CapEx spending year-over-year. And as Randy noted, while it is hard to predict with full precision, we expect that this will be the peak of pressures on our build costs and we are starting to see traction from our efforts to lower our build costs into 2024 and beyond. In addition, we've incurred expenses related to the more than 30 kiosk retrofits in this quarter and have about 15 left to go, which we expect will be completed by the end of the third quarter. We also incurred elevated maintenance CapEx as our teams made the necessary replacements to lower R&M and our Shacks, and ensure a more consistent guest experience. Now, onto guidance, which balances the strong underlying business factors that we've seen in the first half of the year with a degree of uncertainty around the consumer spending outlook and inflationary headwinds. this range does not reflect any additional unknown delays to our development schedule or any changes to the macro landscape beyond what we are experiencing today. For the third quarter, we guide total revenue of $273.5 million to $278 million. With $10.5 million to $11 million of licensing revenue, 10 to 12 company-operated openings, 11 to 13 licensed Shack openings and for same Shack sales to grow by low-to-mid single digits year-over-year with that high end, very consistent with the 4.5% same-Shack sales that we generated in July. Third quarter price will be up high single digits year-over-year. We expect to see mixed headwinds until we launch our hot chicken and burger LTO at the end of the quarter. And as a reminder, historically we've seen AWS sequentially declined into August following peak summer travel and then again, in September around back to school. We are guiding 3Q 2023 restaurant margins to be approximately 20% as we are factoring in continued execution of our margin driving initiatives balanced with uncertainty around inflationary outlook for beef. our guidance reflects beef rising by low double digits year-over-year. However, if prices were to rise by more than this level all else equal, given we do not hedge on this important line item, we would expect to fall below our approximately 20% restaurant margin guidance for the third quarter. We expect food and paper inflation for the third quarter to be up mid-single digits year-over-year. And we expect labor inflation to be in the mid-single-digit range year-over-year. Based on the strength that we've seen in the second quarter and our optimistic outlook for the third quarter, we're adjusting our revenue guidance and increasing our profitability targets for the full year 2023. So, for full-year 2023, our guidance calls for total revenue of $1.07 billion to $1.08 billion growing 18% to 21% year-over-year. Same-Shack sales to grow by low-to-mid single digits with mid-to-high single digits price. we are rolling off the high single-digit price we took in October 2022. We expect to end of the year running at just a low single-digit price, which is in line with our more normal pricing patterns. And this will be a pressure to our same-Shack sales in the fourth quarter. We expect licensing revenue to reach $40 million to $41 million. While we're starting to see some signs of food cost declining and inflationary pressures decelerating, most of our basket cost remains elevated and beef inflationary pressures remain highly uncertain until the end of the year. But despite ongoing headwinds, we guide full-year 2023 restaurant margins to reach 19.25% to 20%. This represents approximately 200 basis points to 270 basis points of restaurant margin expansion in this year. While we are not providing specific fourth quarter guidance at this time, we expect to see typical seasonality in both our sales and profitability from the third to the fourth quarter. As a reminder, prior to COVID, fourth quarter restaurant margins seasonally are lower than the third quarter levels, and that's largely driven by lower sales. While this year, we expect to outperform that historical pre-COVID margin seasonality, given the strong success we were seeing on our strategic priorities, beef inflationary risks are real and present a headwind to our profitability through the rest of the year. We expect this in addition to rolling off that significant October '22 price increase and ending the year with just about 2% price against the broad inflationary pressures we're seeing to impact our fourth quarter flow-through overall. However, all else equal, if beef inflation was consistent with last year's performance and consumer spending patterns remain strong, we see a path for our restaurant margin to exceed 20% for the full year. We expect to open approximately 75 Shack system-wide this year, about 40 of them will be domestic company operated, and approximately, 35 will be operated by our licensed partners. We guide 2023 G&A of $125 million to $130 million. Absent the 3.3 in legal and professional fees that are excluded from adjusted EBITDA in the first and second quarters. at the midpoint, G&A will be 11.9% of total revenue, approximately 75 basis points of leverage versus 2022 levels. Some other guidance points. equity-based compensation expense of approximately $17 million. Preopening of $17 million to $19 million, depreciation of $88 million to $93 million and adjusted pro forma tax rate, excluding the impact of equity-based compensation to be 16% to 18%. altogether, based on our performance so far this year, we are raising our fiscal 2023 adjusted EBITDA to $120 million to $130 million, representing approximately 65% to 80% growth year-over-year. And thank you, with that, turning back to Randy.