For calendered vinyl for temporary (up to 3 years), try General Formulations 203, it's sold by fellers as their Concept 203 or Grimco as their Briteline 3203. It's very inexpensive, prints great (use an unmodified profile for Orajet 3651), and holds up great. They also make a matte version of it called 201, which is nice for indoor signs to help reduce glare, as well as low-tack removable adhesive versions in gloss or matte. We started using this about 3 years ago and swear by it.
For something a little pricier, try Orajet 3165RA. It's still a short term temporary vinyl, but it has a gray blockout adhesive and air-egress adhesive. It's not an every day vinyl, but it's nice to have around when you need to cover something up or need the ease of installation the air egress gives you.
For a good longer-term vinyl for flat surfaces, check out Orajet 3551RA. Same gray blockout and air egress adhesive as the 3165 but it'll give you closer to 5 or more years with laminate. They say it can be used on mild compound curves but I don't trust it there.
For wraps, we love Orajet 3951RA. It's more aggressive than some other vinyls but once you get used to it it's very easy to work with and very forgiving.
When the job calls for laminate, we use Oracal 290 cast or 210 calendered.
For banner material, you can't go wrong with Ultraflexx Jetflex FL 13oz, we've tried many many banner materials and the Jetflex wins hands down. They also make a very nice 10oz version. If you need something heavier or double-sided, Fellers just released a 16oz double-sided blockout with a heavy scrim called Koma, it prints very nice. We also use a ton of Herculite Bantex 18oz double-sided, which is almost indestructable. Also prints awesome. We run all of our banners using an Avery 3100 glossy calendered profile modified for 4-pass bi-directional, heat at 42,40,50. That gives us dead-on color, very fast speeds, with no banding.
There are alot of other medias out there, some are good and some are bad. The best thing you can do isget sample rolls from vendors and experiment until you find the rught combination of profile, speed and print quality to suit your needs. What I've listed is works very well for us, but it wasn't without alot of trial and error. It may not work as well for you, and it can be frustrating searching for good media that delivers consistent sellable quality.
Good luck!