Thank you, Clay, and welcome aboard. We're going to start this presentation on Slide 3. We're going to discuss how we've repositioned ourselves over the last year with the last 2 M&A deals. We're the fourth largest acreage holder in the Gulf of Mexico, and we're the fifth largest operator in the Gulf of Mexico. And we have 2 tenets to our strategy that we think are important. One, we're focused on oil-weighted assets. And two, we think it's critically important that we operate our deepwater infrastructure. It allows us to focus our prospect inventory around this infrastructure and allows us to shorten our cycle times when we think about drilling these wells and getting [ them ] with first oil. Let's go to Slide 4 and talk about what might have been one of our busiest quarters in the company's history. We ended the year by bringing on Venice and Lime Rock ahead of schedule and with sustained rates at over 18,000 barrels equivalent a day. And in January, we announced the QuarterNorth transaction, our second transaction of over $1 billion in the last year, adding important scale to our business. Immediately after that transaction, we announced a couple of capital markets transactions. Including lowering the cost of capital of our debt by refinancing our high-yield notes. We were able to close the QuarterNorth transaction within 45 days, which helps us accelerate our synergies and we were also able to update our financial guidance, increasing our production guidance. And then later, we also updated our debt guidance from $400 million to $550 million of debt repayments for the year. Also within the quarter, we announced the divestiture of our CCS business to TotalEnergies. I'll speak more about the importance of that transaction on the next slide. So on Page 5. We went through a lot of these highlights on Page 4, but let me focus on a couple of bullets on each side of this page. So first, on the left side of the page, we had record production in the first quarter at the high end of our guidance. And you're going to see this go up tremendously in the second quarter, and Sergio will talk about that later in the presentation. Some of these other bullets I just discussed, but let me focus a little bit on the sale of TLCS business. We're bullish about what CCS can be long term. But we did notice that emissions reductions were slowing down within these facilities and the capital requirements were going up. So we thought the right move for us was to transact on this business, we got a solid return over 2x our money and immediately take those proceeds and accelerate our debt repayment. As we get to the right side of the page and focus on what we're trying to do from here, we think it's important to continue to remind the market that even though we're projecting 35% to 40% year-over-year increases to our total corporate production base, we're doing that with a lower capital program relative to our Talos legacy business last year. And what Sergio is going to talk about later in the presentation is how that impacts the free cash flow yield of our business. I'm also going to talk about in this presentation why we're so excited to get this drilling program going, particularly in the Katmai my field, as we think it's an enormous catalyst for our business. So as we turn to Page 6, let's hit some of the highlights of the quarter. We have 79,600 barrels equivalent a day, again, on the high end of our expectations for the quarter. And you'll see that number continue to go up as we own these QuarterNorth assets in full now for the rest of the year. We're very much oil and liquids weighted. We had upstream EBITDA of $268 million for the quarter, which has a netback margin of $42 per BOE. Now that doesn't include workovers, which are heavy in the first quarter, but will taper off through the rest of the year. Upstream CapEx was $112 million and Upstream adjusted free cash flow, not inclusive of some expenses that we still had in the first quarter related to TLCS was $78 million. Now the sale of that TLCS business that I mentioned earlier, allowed us to accelerate our debt reduction. And so we had debt repayments of $225 million for the quarter that also allowed us to reach our leverage goal of 1x within the quarter and so we should lower that continually throughout the year. As we move to Slide 7, one of the more important things about closing the QuarterNorth transaction as quickly as we were able to is it allows us to control 2 things: one, we can control the assets operationally, which is important as we plan the Katmai wells, that I'm going to discuss later in the slide deck. The other thing is we can get to the work of the synergies and in the first quarter, we immediately were able to work on synergies related to G&A, including personnel and IT. In the second quarter, we're going to work on the insurance-related synergies, and then you will also see some synergies that flow through operating cost but even so far since we closed the transaction, we were able to realize what will amount to $20 million of run rate synergies in the first quarter on our way to achieving $30 million by the end of the year and $55 million as we get into 2025. As we go on to Page 8 and talk a little bit about the second quarter. It also relates to the first quarter. The second quarter is where we'll have the HP-1 dry-dock in our Phoenix field, which includes our Tornado asset. We thought [ we ] would be a couple of days late in the first quarter, but ultimately, that got delayed. So it would kind of be a clean 55 days within the second quarter. It will have an impact on the quarter of 5,000 to 6,000 barrels equivalent a day. Sergio will talk about broader values for the second quarter. Just a reminder, this is a dynamically positioned vessel that hosts several -- the production from Phoenix and Tornado. So it has to go into dry dock every 2.5 years. Let's go to Page 9 and talk about the recent lease sale. Now the sale occurred in the fourth quarter of 2023. But ultimately, we were awarded these blocks in the first quarter of 2024 and we were able to achieve 17 blocks with high bids. All were awarded. It adds up to 95,000 acres. But I think if I focus you on the map, it's important to play through how this fits our strategy that I referred to back on Page 3. So light blue is our seismic. Again, covers most of the Gulf of Mexico. Dark blue is our acreage. I mentioned earlier, it's 1 of the biggest acreage positions in the Gulf of Mexico. And then those light blue dots is our facilities that we control and operate. And if you look at the gold call-out boxes, these are the leases that we picked up in the lease sale, notice how they're peppered around those facilities. By owning and controlling and operating these facilities, it focuses our team and where we can develop inventory around these facilities. And what you notice is we think we've added 12 to 15 potential locations just in this last lease sale, growing our overall location count for the company. Let's go to Page 10 and talk about the drilling program for the year and how things are going. I mentioned Venice and Lime Rock at the beginning of the presentation. If you read the earnings release, you might have seen our reference to the Lobster Waterflood project. That was successful in the first quarter, and we expect to see that rate start to hit us in the third quarter and throughout 2024 and 2025. We had a stimulation campaign weighted in the first quarter, then we'll take a break and have another project in the third quarter. The Claiborne Sidetrack, which is non-op was successful, we'll see that rate increase in the second quarter and really get full rate in the third quarter. And then we start our drilling campaign with the Katmai project, I'm going to talk about that. And then the Daenerys project, which is a high impact of salt well. But ultimately, we're going to try to get into this year. It could work into next year as well. And then again, we have the Sunspear completion, which is important. So we can see that production from that discovery of last year be available to us in the first half of next year. As I mentioned, on Page 11, we give you a little update on Venice and Lime Rock, and you can see it here. Again, the Ram Powell facility is a facility that we bought in 2018. We own 100% of that facility. And it's an important host facility, not only for our drilling campaign, but it can be a host facility for third-party discoveries that might need to utilize the asset. But what Lime Rock and Venice has always showed is really good execution on our strategy. These are locations that we identified after we bought the asset, you can see the impact on the right side of the page. And then you can see that we brought those wells online, and they're relatively flat still as we think about this 90 days later. Let's go to Page 12 and talk about the Greater Katmai area. I think it's important to note that this is a discovery, a subsalt discovery at 27,000 feet below the surface. The initial reservoir pressures were over 20,000 pounds. It's a big geological complex that we're still learning about today. It could have as many resources as 180 million to 200 million barrels. And although it's a fairly recent discovery, it's already produced 17 million barrels, and it's doing so at a facility constraint of 27,000 to 28,000 barrels equivalent a day that you can see on the right side of the chart. Now you'll notice in the first quarter, we had some planned downtime. And although that's frustrating, it's an important planned downtime because it lets us work on the facility. It also lets us collect critical information on the pressures that we see down hole. And that's causing us to have more confidence in how we think this field will get developed. So let's continue the conversation around Katmai. I talked about the Katmai West #2 well and why we think it's so important. And there's a lot going on in the slide, but help us understand how we think about better defining and expanding the resource when you have a deepwater discovery like Katmai. So if you go on the graphic on the left, what we're showing you visually is where the Katmai West #1 well was drilled geologically in the structure. And then on the right, we're trying to help you understand how that better defines lowest [indiscernible] oil, which defines our proved reserves. And so you have a 400-foot pay column. That helps define proved reserves and then to better expand what the resource could be, you have to have a combination of good production data, good pressure data and then ultimately another geological test. That next geological test is Katmai West #2 well. we're going to extend the geological column. And with that information and the pressure data and the production data, we're going to have a better understanding on whether the potential of 100 million barrels is available to us. We think this is a very important well. It's a great use of capital allocation and [indiscernible] to talk more about capital allocation outside our drilling program. I'm going to hand it over to Sergio.