Sometimes a company, no matter how hard it tries, simply cannot escape its past.

For example, even if the big tobacco companies open up orphanages and start sponsoring soup kitchens and homeless shelters, few people would overlook their past sins. There are simply some brand names that are so associated with negative behavior, practices, and customer service, that no amount of fixing things will ever remove the taint.

Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC) is one of those brands. It's a company known for monopolistic practices, customer indifference, and generally being well aware that its subscribers had few, if any, other options. That has led to such delightful scandals as this one, where the company changed a subscriber's name on her bill to a word we can't (and don't want to) print here. That's only one example from a company whose brand has become hopelessly intertwined with treating people badly.

Time Warner Cable is literally one of the least-liked companies in the two least-liked industries, according to the most recent American Consumer Satisfaction Index report. The cable and Internet provider came in dead last as a pay-television provider, and fourth from the bottom as an ISP.

That reputation may be very hard to live down, and Time Warner Cable is lucky because it won't have to. This may be Time Warner Cable's best year yet, because it's most likely the year the company will cease to exist.

Time Warner Cable has a customer service presence on social media that seems to mostly acknowledge when service is out. Source: Time Warner Cable's Twitter feed. 

What is happening?
Time Warner Cable is in the process of being purchased by Charter Communications
(CHTR -2.12%) in a deal that values TWC at $78.7 billion. When that happens, both companies will disappear and a new entity, not-so-cleverly called "New Charter" will emerge. It's a big deal that also involves Charter also acquiring Bright House to create a company that will serve 23.9 million customers in 41 states, according to a press release.

If the deal receives regulatory approval, the Charter folks, who will be in charge, said that they plan to "drive investment into the combined entity's advanced broadband network, allow for wider deployment of new competitive facilities-based WiFi networks in public places, and the footprint expansion of optical networks to serve the large marketplace of small and medium sized businesses." That, they claimed, will give subscribers faster Internet, better cable, and more HD channels.

They stop short of saying it will deliver a unicorn in every backyard and a pot of gold under every rainbow, but it's more or less implied that the deal be good not just for subscribers, but for humanity as a whole.

"New Charter will capitalize on technology to create and maintain a more effective and efficient service model," said Charter CEO Tom Rutledge. "Put simply, the scale of New Charter, along with the combined talents we can bring to bear, position us to deliver a communications future that will unleash the full power of the two-way, interactive cable network."

It's a message to the Federal Communications Commission, which must approve the deal, that bigger is better, so please let us be bigger. It's hard to argue that anything won't be better than Time Warner Cable in the public's eyes.

It's not that hard to say goodbye
Sometimes it's sad to see a long-standing brand disappear. This is not one of those times.

Even fairly lousy companies of the past like Eastern Airlines, MCI Worldcom, and Pets.com all bring back some pleasant, or at least amusing memories. TWC will instead leave behind a legacy of raising prices, poor customer service, and 4- to 8-hour appointment windows where the technician somehow ends up being late anyway.

Though it might have been better for both companies to leave behind the Charter name along with Time Warner Cable, New Charter will be a new start. It's a break with the old for TWC customers and a second chance for the company to make a first impression.

The cable industry has a poor track record, but perhaps Charter has learned, and in disappearing, Time Warner Cable will have its best year ever.