I hate this but, arguably, it's no different from Fractured Flickers, The Funny Manns, and even some of the Robert Youngson stuff from the 1960s in terms of using "funny" narration to update old material for "modern" sensibilities. It's just way more grindingly annoying.
I have a DVD of an early 1950s film called "The Slappiest Years of our Lives" that has Peter Sellers doing funny voices over old Stan Laurel, Sennett and Keaton footage. It's a total bastardization of the footage, of course, but proof that this is nothing new. Pete Smith was doing this kind of thing to old silent comedies -- and dramas! -- as early as the 1930s.
Just sayin'...
Chris