Thank you, Jamie. Good afternoon. On the call today, I want to cover 4 key topics: how we allocated our capital in the quarter, what is happening at our largest sports asset, Black Knight Football, where we stand on the restaurant business and exiting additional non-core assets, and how we are managing the holding company. Starting with capital allocation. In the first quarter, we returned approximately $51 million to shareholders through a combination of buybacks and our regular dividend, which currently provides a 4.2% dividend yield. Year-to-date, this $51 million represents about 86% of all the capital we have allocated. The remaining 14% of our capital went to existing investments. A year ago, the comparable shareholder figure return was about 70% to shareholders. The shift toward buybacks was deliberate in the quarter as we viewed the highest return investment available to us was our own equity. We will analyze our capital allocation on an ongoing basis to determine what maximizes shareholder value between capital returns and new investments. On the buyback specifically, year-to-date, we have repurchased 3.4 million shares, representing about 7.3% of our shares outstanding for $43 million. Our board expanded the repurchase authorization to 14.9 million shares during the quarter so we can continue opportunistic buybacks. Now to Black Knight Football, which is the largest single position in our portfolio and in my view, the asset with the greatest upside. AFC Bournemouth currently sits in sixth place in the Premier League. If the club holds that position, it will be the highest finish in the club's 127-year history, and it would qualify the club for European competition for the first time. European qualification is not just a sporting milestone. It materially changes the commercial, branding, and economics of the club. The sporting results are even more notable because over the last 18 months, we have sold top players to Manchester City, Real Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, and Liverpool, totaling roughly $360 million in transfer fees. We have done this and gotten better results, not worse. That is the platform in our investment and operating strategy working. Let me give you one specific example because I think it captures the entire investment thesis of the multi-club. A player named Eli Junior Kroupi, who is 19 years old and came up through the academy at FC Lorient, which is a club we own. In January of last year, AFC Bournemouth, another club we own, acquired him from Lorient and let him remain at the club for the remainder of the season to develop and help with their requalification to Ligue 1. This season, he moved to Bournemouth. He is the leading scorer for Bournemouth, and he has scored more goals in a single Premier League season than any teenager in the history of the Premier League. That is the multi-club platform in one transaction. We developed an asset at a club and moved that asset onto another club at the appropriate time for the team and the player. In the end, both clubs benefit from an economic and a sporting perspective, and the player benefits and improves his career trajectory. This represents the value of the multi-club platform and will drive returns for our investment at Black Knight Football. The financial picture is consistent with the sporting one, with double-digit increases in revenue and EBITDA hitting $136 million, given significant player sales and improved revenues referenced above. Bryan will go into these numbers in more detail in his remarks. We posted a detailed overview of Black Knight Football on Cannae's website during last quarter. I would encourage everyone on the call to spend some time with it as it captures our work. Now to the restaurants. The strategic process around the restaurant group that we announced previously is ongoing. What I can update you on today is that the board's position is unchanged. This is a non-core asset, and our focus is to monetize the asset, maximize proceeds, and redeploy that capital into either higher returning investments, which will grow our NAV or into our own stock. We are working hard to achieve this outcome and expect to be able to give you a more substantive update on the next call. More broadly, the board continues to review our entire portfolio every quarter for the optimal time to sell non-core assets. Restaurants are not the only one we are evaluating. You should expect continued movement in our portfolio, which I will detail at the appropriate time. The last topic from me is the holding company itself. We continue to focus on reducing our corporate holding company costs. I will let Bryan expand upon it in his comments, but for the first quarter, our corporate holding company costs are down approximately 45% from last year, which reflects the discipline of the board and the management have applied to reducing corporate holding company costs. On governance, the board continues to evaluate further governance enhancements. In the first quarter, we refreshed our committee composition to include the 4 new directors elected last year, which brings new perspective into committee deliberations. In summary, we are executing our plan. We are looking for ways to concentrate the portfolio further into sports and entertainment-related assets while monetizing our non-core assets. We are opportunistically returning meaningful capital to our shareholders at prices we believe are well below intrinsic value. We are improving our portfolio companies and providing more transparency into each of them. We are reducing holding company costs. We will keep doing these things until the discount closes and NAV increases. With that, I will turn the call over to Bryan.