Out with the summer reruns, in with the fall freshness. Television’s season of nonstop retreads is almost over. Here are The Post’s top picks for new shows to watch in the coming months on the major networks, cable channels and streaming services.

“Bob ♥ Abishola”

Premiere: Sept. 23, CBS

“Mike & Molly” star Billy Gardell plays a middle-aged compression-sock businessman who has a heart attack and falls for his cardiac nurse, a Nigerian immigrant named Abishola. Nigeria-born newcomer Folake Olowofoyeku won the part of Abishola after her first screen test.

“Stumptown”

Sept. 25, ABC

Cobie Smulders (“How I Met Your Mother”) returns in a weekly network series as Army vet-turned-PI Dex Parios. Criminals hate her; cops resent her because of her military intelligence skills. Throw in a sloppy love life, a bad credit rating and you have a beautiful walking contradiction.

“The Unicorn”

Sept. 26, CBS

In the rare bit of inspired network TV casting, cable TV bad penny Walton Goggins (“Justified”) plays widower and single dad Wade Felton, who discovers that he has the magic formula — steady employment, a full head of hair and a track record of commitment — to become a latter-day babe magnet. Can he handle all of the attention coming his way?

“The Politician”

Sept. 27, Netflix

All eyes are on this pulpy drama about wealthy people behaving badly, the first show to come out of Ryan Murphy’s splashy $300 million deal with Netflix. Starring Ben Platt as a young man running for various offices throughout his life — from high school elections to the White House — the show also boasts an all-star cast including Gwyneth Paltrow and “American Horror Story” alum Jessica Lange and Dylan McDermott.

“Batwoman”

Oct. 6, The CW

“Arrow” is ending, but the sun is hardly setting on superheroes. Say hello to “Batwoman,” starring Ruby Rose (“Orange Is the New Black”). It comes from superproducer Greg Berlanti (“Arrow,” “Riverdale”) and writer Caroline Dries (“The Vampire Diaries”), so expect breakneck plotting. It’s also getting attention for the fact that the character is a lesbian — a first for a superhero show lead.

“Watchmen”

Mid-October, HBO

Damon Lindelof’s (“Lost,” “The Leftovers”) hotly anticipated rendition of the best-selling graphic novel is a strange animal: It’s set in the world of “Watchmen” — an alternate history in which superheroes are real, Watergate was never exposed, and the US won the Vietnam War. But the show, starring Regina King and Jeremy Irons, is set today, after the events of “Watchmen.” So for fans of the comic, it’s new material that’s in conversation with the old stuff. Will it catch on with newcomers who never read it? Time will tell.