Of all my Japanese language learning resources, Taeko Kamiya's Japanese Sentence Patterns for Effective Communication is one of my favorite. The grammar explanations are clear and concise and the idea is novel: organize content by the type of sentence that you're trying to produce.
The only thing that I find wanting is the same thing that I find lacks from all my other language resources: the example sentences are boring. This makes sense because boring sentences are useful. They're the kinds of things that you're likely to need to say. They don't, however, have any magic to stir men's blood as Louis Sullivan used to say.
But, what if the situations in which the sentences arose did? Similar to what James Heisig recommends for his Kanji learning program, what if I created amusing vignettes in order to "shock the mind's eye, to disgust it, to enchant it, to tease it, or to entertain it any way possible so as to brand it" with the meaning of the sentence?
So that's what this project is. The Japanese sentences that appear are entirely taken from Kamiya Sensei's book. The English settings are mine. The number that appears next to the sentence is the grammar point illustrated as itemized in the book.