Agreed. I'd venture to guess that more of us radio geeks than not choose to post sparingly. In my personal life (and especially in my broadcasting experience), I have certainly been one of the many who felt a need to sustantiate their identities through their careers, or by attempting to belittle others. Thankfully, my walk with God has me at the point where I still care deeply about what I do, but it's still a job (although a cool one). Upon entering the pearly gates, I can't picture God asking about my cume, TSL, enunciation, or rotations: it'll be about how I treated Him, my wife, my kids... then my extended family, community, others (including here)... then everything else. Don't get me wrong, I love what I do (I'd love it more if I paid the bills, but y'all know the lyrics to that tune). But if and when God calls me out of broadcasting, I have to be prepared to walk. Don Mattingly knew when to quit the Yankees. Some of the legendary WCBS-FM jocks may not be back.
Anyway, the board where I see the most Christ-like behavior from its regulars is "Production." Not only are the "Jeff Laurence" and "Emmett" types extremely talented, they're also been very helpful to me and countless others ("Production" may have been a good place to have started this thread). A pleasant change of pace from the usual backstabbing sharks I've been accustomed to over the years (this is the price I pay for quitting piano lessons as a kid).
Back to the question, imaging voices I have enjoyed include radioelizabeth, Jon Rivers at times, rocker Joe Kelly (who also had a killer set of soundalike guitar beds back in the day), the mighty WLNG with their billion PAMS jingles, Star 99's Abel, WFAN's previous imager (simply outstanding - though I don't hate the newer, current package), and whomever did Salem-New York, though the name eludes me right now (LA something?). I initially liked the Jack-FM stuff because it was different, but it could get monotonous quickly at times. WLIX-FM's Scotty Hart has thrown in some interesting liners as well, making an unlikely yet effective transition from the network's past alternative rock days. You may also want to see
http://www.hisair.net/voice_over.htm .
Crazy idea? Try the imaging yourself, take advice from those you trust (only those willing to say "I hate it"), take note of what captures YOUR attention without overdoing it to the point that you'll change the station, then break all previous rules and see what you create. Then shorten all of it just enough to captivate the LISTENER, it's all probably less clever than you think. Then add reverb like WLNG, big swooshes like on the old WFAN parts, and guitar twangs like WRCN used to (then again, don't if it doesn't fit). Take the money you saved on imaging and pour it into promotion (or at least pizza for the staff).