No, this isn't pagan. Pagan is an old English, I think, word derived from Pagani, and meaning, country dweller.
The Pagani,pagan people, being in what we would today call the sticks, were not as aware of changes and new practices occuring in more populated and busy areas. What we'd call , old cities.
So, conventional practices or traditions by country folk would seem the norm. While those in the busy more populated areas, "cities", had evolved from conventional practices to more efficient modern ones.
Here is a clip of that "rite" without the commentary.
This isn't paganism. This is modernism entering the church. That's far worse.