Thanks, David. I'll comment first on quarterly results, discuss our revised 2022 guidance and some of the moving pieces heading into the fourth quarter and 2023, and then conclude with the balance sheet. Third quarter results were ahead of plan, as David mentioned, due to a number of operational factors, including earlier rent commencements in higher occupancy and higher overage and ancillary income. These operational factors totaled about $0.01 per share relative to budget. The quarter also included $200,000 of unbudgeted straight-line rent from the conversion of cash basis tenants, and $300,000 from payments and settlements related to prior periods. In terms of operating metrics, the lease rate for the portfolio was up 60 basis points sequentially and 270 basis points year-over-year with our lease rate now at 95%, which is well above the company's pre-COVID high watermark of 94.3% back in 2017. Highlighting our leasing volume and backlog, we had over 250,000 square feet of new leases commenced in the third quarter, representing over $5 million of annualized base rent. Despite that, the SNO pipeline was effectively unchanged at $22 million as new leases were added and offset the impact of commencements. These signed leases continue to represent over 5% of annualized third quarter base rent or over 6% if you also include leases in negotiation in our pipeline. We provided an updated schedule on the expected ramp up of the pipeline on Page 6 of our earnings slides. Same-store NOI grew 1.1% in the third quarter with the uncollectable revenue line item a 160 basis point headwind to year-over-year growth. Included in uncollectable revenue this quarter were $510,000 of reserves related to unpaid revenue from Cineworld as a result of its recent bankruptcy filing. Moving on to our outlook. We are raising our 2022 OFFO guidance to a range of $1.16 to a $1.17 per share. Rent commencements, uncollectible revenue and G&A are the largest swing factors expected to impact fourth quarter results, and where we end up in the revised full-year range. We are also raising expectations for fee income to the top end of the prior range and leaving same-store NOI guidance unchanged, which we believe is prudent considering the macro environment despite third quarter outperformance versus budget. To-date outside of the Cineworld bankruptcy, we've had no unbudgeted fallout or other bad debt headwinds. Details on same-store NOI are in our press release and earning slides. For the fourth quarter of 2022, there are a few moving pieces to consider from the third quarter. First, as I previously mentioned, we had $300,000 of non-recurring uncollectible revenue and $200,000 of non-recurring straight-line rent in the third quarter. Second, the Madison assets sold in July generated almost $200,000 of NOI at share and almost $750,000 in JV fees in the third quarter, which implies total JV fees of about $1.8 million for the fourth quarter. Lastly, the third quarter included $1.3 million of lease termination income, which is about $1 million higher than our trailing two-year quarterly average. A summary of these factors is on Page 9 of our earning slides. Moving to 2023. We are not providing guidance at this time, but wanted to provide clarity on a few line items heading into the New Year. First on fees, we expect JV and RBI fees to total about $5 million with minimal contribution from RBI. This assumption reflects activity to-date along with additional expected JV asset sales. Second, we would expect G&A to be about $50 million. Third, 2022 year-to-date results include $2.8 million of non-recurring reserve reversals, and based on remaining AR on the balance sheet, we expect reversals to be relatively muted in 2023. And lastly, we have three Cineworld or Regal Cinema locations with total annualized base rent of $2.9 million as of September 30. None of the leases have been rejected to-date, but it is likely that we will recapture at least one location based on our initial conversations. The three leases are generally evenly split in terms of rent and recoveries across our total exposure. Finally, ending with our balance sheet. At quarter end, leverage was 5.3x, fixed charge remained over 4x, and our unsecured debt yield was over 20%. In the third quarter, we repaid the debt associated with the Madison Pool A portfolio as part of that sale, and swapped the $200 million term loan to a fixed rate for the remainder of the loans termed at an all-in rate of 3.8%. Pro forma for these transactions, the company has just $87 million of unsecured debt maturing through year-end 2023, $870 million of availability on a recently recast line of credit and floating rate exposure is just 6% of total debt. This leverage profile and significant capacity provides substantial liquidity and allows us to take advantage of potential future opportunities as they arise and to drive sustainable growth. With that, I'll turn it back to David.