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The pandemic has taken some of the charm away from city life, as COVID-19 has closed the bistros, cultural events and nightlife that make Montreal unique.

At the same time, remote work has become the new normal even as rent and home prices are going through a messy divorce with reality. This is provoking some young people to consider moving to smaller, quieter, more affordable places. Now, New Brunswick wants in on the action.

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A hugely popular post from the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Montreal caught the hotel and Fondation CHU Sainte-Justine by surprise on Monday morning, prompting organizers to adjust it.

According to the foundation's spokesperson, Jade Gratton, the number of times the post was shared was "a surprise for them." 

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If you haven't heard of Montreal TikToker and drummer Domino Santantonio, now would be the time to get clued in — because she's about to pop off.

Santantonio, who has 456,000 followers on TikTok, was recently selected by the video-sharing social networking app to star in its upcoming campaign, "It Starts on TikTok."

The campaign will first air on VRAK and RDS on October 10 and 11, and it "showcase[s] the role that TikTok has and will continue to play in the lives of hundreds of millions of people," according to a statement sent to MTL Blog.

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Montreal public health director, Dr. Mylène Drouin, urged young people to stop gathering with friends and residents of other households in a press conference on September 29. Drouin said that COVID-19 cases in young Montrealers are most closely related to sports and social gatherings at home and in public spaces like parks.

"Currently, fifty percent of transmission [happens through] contact with someone who lives at home or with friends," she said.

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