Gov. Cuomo has been claiming for years that he’s changing the “culture” in Albany. Sorry, gov: The news leaking out about the end-of-session “Big Ugly” package of bills says otherwise.

Indeed, the lack of change was blatant. Albany rammed through more bills in 24 hours than in all of January and February combined. During the whole session prior to the final days, the two houses had OK’d less than 200 bills. By the end, they’d passed 554.

And most bills were hammered out behind closed doors, without public scrutiny. The ethics bill passed in the dark of night.

For some bills, Cuomo had to issue a “message of necessity” to skirt the state’s three-day “aging” requirement meant to give lawmakers a chance to read, digest and (ha!) debate legislation before voting on it.

The “necessity”: Lawmakers wanted to go home for the summer.

And some of what they passed just reeks.

Like one bill that seems a direct giveaway to Reliant Bus Co., reportedly letting it reopen its low-bid contract with the city — at a much higher cost to taxpayers.

Reliant’s owner, Alexis Lodde, is the focus of a Preet Bharara subpoena in the probe of Mayor de Blasio’s funny-money scandal, thanks to a $100,000 “per the mayor” donation to help Senate Democrats in the 2014 elections. Yet the bill’s Senate sponsor was Marty Golden — a Brooklyn Republican.

Another outrage: $420 million a year for handouts to Hollywood moguls who make films and TV shows here. Lawmakers even expanded the giveaway — letting companies collect even larger checks in 12 counties. They also set aside $50 million for payments to music and “digital gaming” honchos.

“The rest of the state’s taxpayers are left with a heavier load in a state that already has the highest taxes in the nation,” notes Assemblyman Kieran Lalor (R-Dutchess County).

Then again, lawmakers (and the gov) love these deals because the fat cats turn around and donate handsomely. Maybe this was one bill they did read before passing.