Thank you, Samantha, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin today by going back to what I talked about in my opening remarks during our last earnings call in late April. In those remarks, I spoke of the paramount importance of the VICI dividend in creating value for VICI shareholders. Those remarks struck a chord for a lot of you, as the feedback we received from many of our active management owners was along the line of the dividend is indeed important, and we're glad you're focused on it. Today, I want to build on those remarks by focusing on what the dividend critically contributes to, and that's total return. Total return is, of course, the function of dividend return plus dependent on valuation and incremental return generated by the capitalization of earnings growth. In a recent note, in early July, the BofA equity strategist, Savita Subramanian, wrote this headline, "Welcome back to a total return world." Savita goes on to say, and I quote, "We expect a rising contribution to total return from dividends. Dividends contributed 40% of total returns from 1936 to 2021 but just over 16% over the past decade. From here, we think the contribution of dividends to returns could rise demonstrably. With aging demographics and sticky inflation risks, the supply-demand argument for inflation protected income via stocks is, in our view, compelling and bullish." Savita was recently featured in Wall Street Journal cover story on this topic of total return and the contribution of dividends to total return. In that article as well as in a podcast with The Meb Faber, Savita shares an analysis of nearly 100 years of total return from the Russell 1000. And in that analysis, she finds that the highest total returns over that period have been generated by stocks with higher dividends, specifically by stocks in the second and first quintiles of dividend yield in that order. While stocks were the lowest dividend yields, this quintile significantly lagged the returns of higher-yielding stocks and not by a little but by quite a lot, nearly 4x higher return for the second quintile and about 2.5x for the first quintile versus the fifth quintile according to the Wall Street Journal. Again, what Savita stresses is the dividend return is a key driver of delivering superior total return along with the capitalization of earnings growth. In the case of VICI, we see our total return building blocks as having 3 key components: Dividend return; capitalization of same-store earnings growth; and capitalization of new store growth, whether through new acquisitions or property or new loans on property. our 2025 same and new store growth expectations are embedded in the updated 2025 earnings guidance. David will discuss in detail with you shortly. The midpoint of our revised 2025 guidance now calls for 4.4% growth in AFFO per share versus 2024. We believe this growth rate within the net lease REIT category will put us among the leaders in AFFO per share growth for 2025. To date in 2025, we are generating our earnings growth through a combination of same-store earnings growth and new store external growth. When it comes to same-store earnings growth, VICI's owners benefit from a same-store NOI growth rate that, according to Green Street's latest published net lease research is over 5x higher than the average projected rate of same-store NOI growth for net lease REITs. Our external or new store growth has been funded substantially through the deployment of our retained cash flow, meaning at this point, we are growing our 2025 earnings without significantly growing our share count and without significantly growing our net debt. What you are seeing though this internally funded growth, are the advantages of VICI having achieved our current level of scale with more than $600 million a year of retained cash flow available for investment. I will also note that we are converting our revenue growth to earnings growth at a high rate of flow-through given our continuing discipline around our G&A costs, which as percentages of both revenues and assets are among the lowest of large cap REITs. We believe our current use of our internal funding capability or what we call capital markets independence together with exacting cost discipline is a sound strategy for defending our dividend, growing our earnings and creating the conditions that can potentially lead to compelling total return no matter if external funding windows are open or closed. To be sure, we may in the quarters and years ahead to develop investment opportunities require and also accretively support issuance of incremental equity and debt in greater size. But for the time being, we believe we are serving our stakeholders well by generating earnings growth and striving for compelling total return without significant equity and credit market reliance. Before I turn the call over to John, I'll finish by repeating what Savita said. Welcome back to a total return world. Here at VICI, we always live in a total return world, and that's because we always believe in the power of compounding. Total return is the power source of compounding. No matter what the market does, we never lose faith in that power. And now over to you, John.