Jucika

The comic often satirizes and parodies sexism, with many of the strips revolving around unwanted attention from men and how she sometimes uses it to her advantage.

Starting in 1957, Jucika was initially published in the magazine Érdekes Újsag, and was later moved to Lúdas Matyi due to its popularity.

[9][10] In 1959, Érdekes Újság was merged with the Ország-Világ magazine, and from then on, Pál Pusztai, and with him Jucika, moved to the satirical humor paper Lúdas Matyi.

[11] From then on, the popularity of the character and its creator continued to grow, Jucika appeared several times on the front page of Ludas Matyi.

In the 2010s, Jucika had a resurgence in popularity on social media websites such as Twitter and Tumblr, where people began sharing her comics and showing appreciation for the theme and nature of the series.

[1] Communities revolving around Jucika were formed, and they made fan art of the series, or posted the comics for people to see and remember.

was opened at the Hungarian Museum of Trade and Tourism[16] (Magyar Kereskedelmi és Vendéglátóipari Múzeum), which showed the history of advertisements targeted towards women throughout the socialist era of Hungary.

It illustrated the dynamics of the advertising industry, along with how gender roles for women changed over the years, with Jucika being used as a caricature of the modern woman of the time.