Good afternoon. First, I would like to welcome Mr. James Berry, our new CFO, to his first XpresSpa earnings call. Welcome, James. This afternoon, I’d like to provide a brief update on our legacy spa business before moving on to where we currently stand with XpresCheck. Afterwards, I will share some preliminary thoughts, including some near-term steps that we’re taking in evolving our business model to capitalize on what we view as a substantial opportunity in the travel, health and wellness space in a post-COVID world. So starting with our legacy XpresSpa business. While airport traffic begins to recover, COVID-19 cases continue to decline. And as more and more people get vaccinated, the consensus across the travel industry is that it will likely take until late 2022 to early 2023 before we can return to pre-pandemic travel volumes. We are certainly encouraged that traffic has picked up recently, perhaps due to in part to spring break excursions and that the airport and airline employees are returning to work, still we have a long way to go. And based on historical seasonal patterns, traffic is likely to taper off again in the near-term before the summer. Beginning last July, we reopened two international XpresSpa locations to test the waters. Specifically, we opened our spas in Dubai International Airport, where we have been providing limited spa services and selling various spa products, such as neck pillows and travel blankets. Then in late September, our sole domestic XpresSpa franchisee reopened in Austin, Bergstrom International Airport. However, all three of these locations continue to underperform despite increasing the airport traffic and are not close to break-even profitability. Given these circumstances and what we believe will be continued customer uneasiness, having one-to-one close personal interactions with massage therapists and cosmetologist in an airport setting, we currently do not have plans to reopen our spas for traditional services in the near-term. We have run analysis on several low to mid-volume scenarios and none of them project an acceptable financial outcome at this point in time. This could change as pandemic -- as the pandemic wane and we will therefore reevaluate possible reopenings of select spas in the future. Now turning to our XpresCheck business. As of today, we are operating 11 XpresCheck Wellness Centers across nine airport locations, with two additional pop-up locations in the pipeline. First one, the first will be opened at Tacoma -- Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and the second at San Francisco International Airport. We expect both locations to open in the coming weeks. Our patient volumes at XpresCheck continue to increase with rising traffic at the airport and we are further aided by the rollout of the rapid molecular COVID test that we launched in early October. This has been by far the most preferred option compared to the Polymerase Chain Reaction or PCR test or the blood antibody test and is at a substantially higher price point $200 versus $75. Over 73% of all tests that we’re conducting are now rapid, which has also helped improve gross profit margin and help to reduce our monthly cash burn. As detailed in our last quarterly earnings call 10-K and in today’s 10 -- in the last 10-Q and in today’s 10-K filing based on state-by-state regulations, we do not report revenue on a per patient basis or services. But instead, we receive our revenues as a management service fee from the physicians. And this is because XpresCheck operates as a management service organization or MSO, which is a healthcare specific administrative and management services engine that provides a range of administrative and management functions with a company management services agreement with a physician as governed by state-by-state regulations. As a result, we are not able to recognize revenue in the fourth quarter of 2020 related to XpresCheck. However, we have reassessed our agreements and updated projections for new locations that are better reflective of the actual patient volumes that we’re seeing in our locations. Therefore, we anticipate being able to report revenue in the first-half of this year. Also notable, effective March 8, 2021, XpresCheck transitioned to a fee-for-service model for all tests, similar to what we’ve been doing all along with the rapid tests. Under this model, patients pay XpresCheck directly at the time of service and then they are able to submit their testing fees for insurance reimbursement on their own. However, lab fees are still submitted for insurance reimbursement from the outside lab companies. We will also be adding a rapid PCR test and another rapid antigen test to our suite of COVID-19 testing services this week, which will provide passengers additional methods of testing that many require for travel and additional lines of revenue for us. In the past several months, the XpresCheck brand has also secured a few notable partnerships. As of -- as announced on November 13, 2020, we become -- we became a designated State of Hawaii’s trusted testing partner. All travelers, ages five and over, are required to take a Nucleic Acid Amplification Test or NAAT from a certified Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment, CLIA, lab in order to bypass the State of Hawaii’s 14-day mandatory quarantine. The State of Hawaii accepts test results only from Trusted Testing and Travel Partners. Tests must be taken no more than 72 hours before flight departure time. We’re proud to be a trusted partner of the State of Hawaii as people take a long awaited Hawaiian vacation. As of January 28, we’ve been working with United Airlines, Delta Airlines, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines out of our JFK Terminal 4 location, our Newark Liberty International Airport locations and our Boston Logan International Airport locations for flights to The Netherlands. The Netherlands COVID-19 testing policy for incoming passengers -- international passengers requires a negative COVID-19 PCR test within 72 hours before departure, as well as the negative COVID-19 rapid test four hours before departure. This is the strictest travel requirement globally at the time. We are collaborating with these major airlines to meet the rapid four-hour test requirement at these select airports. We have also piloted at JFK Terminal 4 the implementation of a rapid antigen tests administering BD Veritor’s rapid SARS COVID-2 test for the BD Veritor Plus System. Next, we partnered with The CommonTrust Network’s CommonPass platform which links COVID-19 test results from partnered labs such as XpresCheck directly into the CommonPass app. Passengers are then able to show their test results through this app to airlines and destinations so as to ensure a hassle-free entry and avoid quarantines, where applicable. The CommonPass digital health pass is currently accepted upon arrival at Aruba Queen Beatrix International Airport to enter and JetBlue U.S. customers traveling from Boston are able to utilize the two XpresCheck Wellness Centers at Boston’s Logan International Airport for COVID-19 testing, with their test results then uploaded to the CommonPass app. We are hopeful that acceptance of CommonPass will continue to expand over time. We are engaged in discussions with other emerging health passport apps that could similarly be deployed to XpresCheck Wellness Centers as soon as reasonably possible. We are also awaiting approval on a state-by-state basis to administer COVID-19 vaccines approved for use by the FDA at select XpresCheck locations. Upon state-by-state approval and receipt of the necessary COVID-19 vaccines, we may launch a vaccination program primarily focused on airline employees and airport staff initially, although passengers could be eligible for vaccines over time, subject to supply availability and other state eligibility requirements. Finally, on XpresCheck, we’ve believe -- while we believe that COVID-19 testing will remain an important necessary service for airline employees, airline staff and passengers for the foreseeable future, we are reassessing future development then the additional XpresCheck Wellness Centers pop-up or other beyond the two pending locations in the pipeline. This is based on our evaluation of the economic viability of the remaining major hub, airports and developing international travel requirements. This decision was made so that we can dedicate our efforts and resources to bring to market a new more comprehensive travel, health and wellness brand focuses on emerging new category of health focused travel and personal wellness services that would still include COVID-19 testing and other related services. So I’ll turn to the new travel health and wellness brand that we’re working on. We’d now like to start sharing our plans with our investors as to how we plan to evolve as an organization. As you are already aware, once the pandemic struck last March, we quickly pivoted to XpresCheck as a bridge between our legacy Spa business and to what we believe health and wellness brand customers will be looking for in a post-COVID world. We’re at the point where a need state and a want state are colliding and we can provide the answer for both. People need to be safe and healthy, but they want to return to travel, so we can help them travel well. For clear reasons, consumers are more health and wellness focused in general than ever before, and this is especially true as it relates to travel. With this new brand, the name we will announce at a later date, we plan to provide health and wellness services for the entire travel journey from planning to post-arrival care. We’re developing a health and wellness brand that is positioned for a post-pandemic world and leverages our historic travel wellness experience and our newly acquired healthcare expertise. We are preparing a launch of a travel health and wellness company, delivering on-demand access to integrated healthcare through technology and personalized services. The strategic brand pillars are travel, health and wellness, which place our experience and assets directly in the intersection of these three categories. Travel wellness was a skyrocketing trend category prior to COVID-19 and adding health to that combination will enable to rise again. In the health pillar, the new brand will be differentiated because it is a travel-focused and in airports, while in wellness it is differentiated because it is a travel industry retailer and expert. In travel, the new brand is differentiated because it has health and wellness experience and will provide access to integrated care and health documents all in one app. We see this concept evolution as a significant opportunity to be a category innovator and a new niche industry, working leverage technology in addition to its existing real estate and airport operational experience in providing travelers with peace of mind and access to integrated healthcare. The brand name, again, will be announced at a later date. While COVID-19 testing will be available under this new brand, broader suite of services may include pre-travel planning, on-site medical services such as metabolic panel testing, anxiety care, and convenient travel care; virtual chat care and video care through a partnership with an established telemedicine company; and access to virtual wellness care such as guided meditations and yoga. The first two integrated travel health and wellness locations are expected to open in late summer or early fall 2021. Over time, the Company intends to evolve some of its legacy XpresSpa footprint into this new travel health and wellness brand, where feasible, as well as open additional locations in other suitable terminals and airport venues. However, over the long term, we envision that our digital channels will provide more significant growth opportunities for revenue and profit than our airport real estate. The success of this revenue stream will be achieved through both subscription-based services that provide care and tools supporting travel health and wellness. Further, we will be offering upstream content that can be monetized through affiliate revenue as well as curated retail through e-commerce. We are currently laying the groundwork to have our initial digital assets launched in the summer timeframe ahead of the first two brick-and-mortar location openings as travel begins its recovery this fall and into 2022. Given its strong liquidity position and poise for growth, we also - we would also consider accretive acquisitions and other investments to further broaden our service and retail offerings and would invest in new opportunities beyond this new evolving concept. We are excited about this new brand in the future of XpresSpa. With that, I’ll turn it to James.