In this surreal re-imagining of Dante's The Divine Comedy, an unemployed factory worker votes for Donald Trump in the November 2016 election and inadvertently triggers his own personal apocalypse.
Haunted by memories of his parents' murders, and a long lost love, Buck is fired in October 2014 after 12-years of productive and steady employment at a tractor parts supply factory in Canon City, Colorado.
A year later, while barely scraping by on unemployment, Buck becomes fascinated by the 'no bullshit swagger' of Donald J. Trump and throws all of his free time into campaigning for the brash Republican Nominee.
Disappointed by the lack of decent job opportunities post-Trump's Election win, and feeling more lonely and isolated than ever, Buck decides, in a belated New Years resolution--to get healthier by joining the local gym and enrolling in a class on plant-based cooking.
As his body and mind struggle to heal, circumstances nudge him into confronting his long-held prejudices and fears--questioning Trump's erratic policies and their devastating effects on his immediate friends who have vanished without a trace, having been caught between opposite sides of one of the biggest drug busts in Colorado state history.
By the time Buck realizes he is the contest winner of an extreme sports PR stunt promoting the first anniversary of Trump's inauguration, he is faced with an excruciating moral dilemma--one that will alter his life forever.
Often satirical, and sometimes horrific, "The Man Who Voted For Trump" takes the frazzled temperature of today's polarized era, and the 'agony and the ecstasy' of an America gone mad.